82_FR_42630 82 FR 42457 - Air Plan Approval; AK, Fairbanks North Star Borough; 2006 PM2.5

82 FR 42457 - Air Plan Approval; AK, Fairbanks North Star Borough; 2006 PM2.5

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 173 (September 8, 2017)

Page Range42457-42473
FR Document2017-18768

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is approving state implementation plan (SIP) revisions submitted by the State of Alaska (Alaska or the State) to address Clean Air Act (CAA or Act) requirements for the 2006 24-hour fine particulate matter (PM<INF>2.5</INF>) national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) in the Fairbanks North Star Borough Moderate PM<INF>2.5</INF> nonattainment area (FNSB NAA). Alaska submitted an attainment plan for the FNSB NAA on December 31, 2014, to meet applicable requirements for an area classified as ``Moderate'' nonattainment, and made additional submissions and provided clarifying information to supplement the attainment plan in January 2015, March 2015, July 2015, November 2015, March 2016, November 2016, and January 2017 (hereafter, the initial submission and all supplemental and clarifying information will be collectively referred to as ``the FNSB Moderate Plan'').

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 173 (Friday, September 8, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 173 (Friday, September 8, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 42457-42473]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-18768]


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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 52

[EPA-R10-OAR-2015-0131: FRL-9967-21-Region 10]


Air Plan Approval; AK, Fairbanks North Star Borough; 2006 PM2.5 
Moderate Area Plan

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is approving state 
implementation plan (SIP) revisions submitted by the State of Alaska 
(Alaska or the State) to address Clean Air Act (CAA or Act) 
requirements for the 2006 24-hour fine particulate matter 
(PM2.5) national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) in 
the Fairbanks North Star Borough Moderate PM2.5 
nonattainment area (FNSB NAA). Alaska submitted an attainment plan for 
the FNSB NAA on December 31, 2014, to meet applicable requirements for 
an area classified as ``Moderate'' nonattainment, and made additional 
submissions and provided clarifying information to supplement the 
attainment plan in January 2015, March 2015, July 2015, November 2015, 
March 2016, November 2016, and January 2017 (hereafter, the initial 
submission and all supplemental and clarifying information will be 
collectively referred to as ``the FNSB Moderate Plan'').

DATES: This action is effective on October 10, 2017.

ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a docket for this action under 
Docket ID No. EPA-R10-OAR-2015-0131. All documents in the docket are 
listed on the https://www.regulations.gov Web site. Although listed in 
the index, some

[[Page 42458]]

information is not publicly available, e.g., CBI or other information 
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such 
as copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet and will be 
publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket 
materials are available through https://www.regulations.gov, or please 
contact the person identified in the For Further Information Contact 
section for additional availability information.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Claudia Vaupel at 206-553-6121, or 
[email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document, wherever ``we'', 
``us'' or ``our'' are used, it is intended to refer to the EPA.

Table of Contents

I. Background
II. Public Comments and the EPA's Responses
    A. Comments on Control Measures
    B. Comments on Enforcement
    C. Comments on Rules
    D. Other Comments
III. Final Action
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

I. Background

    On February 2, 2017, the EPA published its proposal to approve the 
FNSB Moderate Plan submitted by Alaska to address CAA requirements for 
the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS in the FNSB NAA. 82 FR 9035. 
Specifically, we proposed to find that the FNSB Moderate Plan meets the 
substantive statutory and regulatory requirements for base-year and 
projected emissions inventories, precursor demonstrations, analysis and 
imposition of reasonably available control measures/technologies (RACM/
RACT), reasonable further progress (RFP), quantitative milestones (QMs) 
and a demonstration that attainment by the December 31, 2015 attainment 
date was impracticable. We also proposed to approve the 2017 motor 
vehicle emissions budgets, state and local rules that were included in 
the FNSB Moderate Plan, and exceptional event demonstrations submitted 
by Alaska to address unrepresentative monitoring data that occurred 
during certain events. On July 26, 2017, Alaska withdrew from the EPA's 
consideration four provisions from its SIP submissions.\1\ The removal 
of these provisions does not affect this final action fully approving 
the FNSB Moderate Plan. For a description of Alaska's submissions, and 
our evaluation and rationale for the proposed action, please see the 
proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register at 82 FR 9035, February 2, 
2017.
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    \1\ See Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation letter, 
Withdrawal of items from the State Implementation Plan submittal for 
the Fairbanks North Star Borough nonattainment area, July 26, 2017, 
available in the docket for this action.
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II. Public Comments and the EPA's Responses

    The EPA provided a 30-day period for the public to comment on our 
proposed action on the FNSB Moderate Plan which ended on March 3, 2017. 
During this comment period, we received five public comment letters. 
The public comments can be found in the docket for this action. Two 
commenters were supportive of efforts to improve air quality in 
general. One commenter expressed appreciation for the ``strong 
standards implemented in 2006 that strengthened the 24-hour 
PM2.5 NAAQS.'' The other commenter stated that ``Alaska has 
certainly done their research and taken seriously their drafting of the 
proposed plan.'' Three commenters opposed the EPA's proposed approval 
action. In general, these adverse comments questioned the approvability 
of Alaska's RACM/RACT analysis, Alaska's authority to enforce the 
requirements of the attainment plan, the stringency of the submitted 
regulations compared to existing state regulations, and expressed 
concerns about the high PM2.5 concentrations in the area and 
the resulting impacts on public health. We summarize the adverse 
comments and provide our responses in the following paragraphs.

A. Comments on Control Measures

    Comment 1: Two commenters opposed the EPA's proposed approval of 
the FNSB Moderate Plan on the basis that it did not consider all 
potential measures that Alaska could have imposed to meet the RACM/RACT 
requirement for a Moderate area attainment plan. One commenter stated 
that ``there are many available control measures for residential wood 
combustion that the State has neglected to consider'' and provided as 
examples requirements for low-sulfur heating fuel, control measures 
based on housing density, programs to improve wood-burning device 
operation and maintenance, and training and certification programs for 
installers of wood stoves. The commenter then asserted that the ``State 
was required to analyze these control measures to determine whether 
they are reasonable for Fairbanks.'' The other commenter stated that 
``Alaska's consideration of technologically and economically feasible 
controls was impermissibly narrow'' and provided as examples limiting 
the hours of operation for wood-heating facilities, and wood 
gasification and carbon capture and storage that Alaska did not 
evaluate or impose as part of the FNSB Moderate Plan.
    Response 1: The EPA disagrees with these comments because Alaska 
adequately evaluated appropriate measures for the FNSB NAA for purposes 
of the FNSB Moderate Plan. Section 107(a) of the CAA provides states 
with both authority and primary responsibility for developing SIPs that 
meet applicable statutory and regulatory requirements for attaining, 
maintaining, and enforcing the NAAQS. States have discretion in 
formulating their attainment plans so long as they meet the applicable 
requirements of the Act.\2\ Additionally, the EPA has explained that 
the control measure evaluation process ``generally allows states to 
apply reasoned judgment as they identify potential control measures for 
sources of direct PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors in 
their respective nonattainment areas.'' 81 FR 58037, August 24, 2016. 
For the reasons provided in our proposed rule and further in the 
following paragraphs, we conclude that the FNSB Moderate Plan provides 
for the implementation of all RACM/RACT that could reasonably be 
implemented in the FNSB NAA as required by CAA sections 172(c) and 
189(a)(1)(C). We respond in the following paragraphs to the specific 
comments pertaining to the six potential control measures highlighted 
by the commenters.
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    \2\ CAA section 110(k)(3), 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(3) and 40 CFR 
52.02(a); see also Union Elec. Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246, 250 (1976); 
Train v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 421 U.S. 60, 79 (1975).
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    Response 1.a. Low-sulfur heating fuel requirement as opposed to 
economic incentives. One commenter asserted that Alaska failed to 
evaluate, as part of the analysis for potential RACM/RACT control 
measures for residential wood combustion, a requirement for the use of 
low sulfur fuel ``as opposed to merely providing incentives for its 
use.'' The EPA reevaluated Alaska's analysis on low sulfur residential 
fuel oil in light of the comment. Alaska assessed the technological and 
economic feasibility of switching from the current residential heating 
oil used in the area to a low-sulfur fuel (FNSB Moderate Plan appendix 
III.D.5.7-41 and 5.7-57). Specifically, Alaska determined that the 
incremental cost of users switching to low sulfur fuel oil was not 
economically feasible for purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan.

[[Page 42459]]

    The EPA notes that the commenter may have believed that Alaska did 
not adequately evaluate the use of low sulfur fuel because Alaska did 
not separately consider both mandatory requirements to use such fuel 
and incentive programs to encourage the voluntary use of such fuel. 
Upon reviewing Alaska's analysis, however, we believe that the economic 
feasibility analysis for this control measure applies to both a 
mandatory requirement, as well as to incentives to use low-sulfur fuel. 
We note that while the subheading in the economic incentives section 
refers to ``incentives,'' the analysis is not limited to only providing 
incentives and more broadly analyzes the costs of low-sulfur fuel, 
whether implemented through a requirement or with incentives. The EPA 
acknowledges that the ``incentives'' subheading is somewhat confusing 
given the broader analysis that follows it, but we do not agree that 
Alaska failed to consider requirements to use low-sulfur fuel 
adequately for purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan.
    Alaska concluded that switching to low sulfur fuels would not be 
economically feasible; this conclusion would apply to both incentive-
based and mandatory measures. We note that the FNSB NAA has been 
reclassified from Moderate to Serious, and Alaska will be required to 
prepare and submit for EPA review a Serious area attainment plan. 82 FR 
21711, May 10, 2017. We anticipate that Alaska will thoroughly evaluate 
such control measures again, with updated economic data and in light of 
the longer Serious area attainment deadline, in developing the Serious 
area attainment plan for this area which requires analysis and 
implementation of Best Available Control Measures/Technologies (BACM/
BACT).
    Response 1.b. Control measures based on housing density. One 
commenter asserted that Alaska failed to consider restrictions on the 
use of certain residential heating devices based on population density, 
i.e., restricting the use of such devices in more densely populated 
areas. The commenter referenced San Joaquin Valley Air District Rule 
4901 (SJV Rule 4901) as an example of a housing density-based control 
measure that Alaska did not consider. SJV Rule 4901 limits or prohibits 
new installations of heating devices based on the number of dwellings 
per acre. Although we agree that such control measures can be 
appropriate based on the facts and circumstances of a given area, we 
disagree with the commenter's assertion that Alaska did not consider 
all RACM/RACT in the FNSB Moderate Plan because it did not specifically 
evaluate a housing density-based control measure, like the one in SJV 
Rule 4901, for purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan. In its January 6, 
2017 clarification document (2017 Clarification), Alaska evaluated a 
general prohibition on new wood-heating device installations in the 
FNSB NAA and determined that it was not feasible because in extreme 
cold temperatures alternative sources of heat that do not rely on 
electricity and are not at risk of damage from freezing are a critical 
source of heating and must be an available option to the public. See 
2017 Clarification, pp. 2 and 5. We note that the effect of limiting 
new wood-heating device installations based on housing density 
functionally results in prohibiting their installation for some homes. 
The rationale provided by Alaska for the infeasibility of a general 
prohibition on wood-heating device installations would also apply to 
prohibiting wood-heating device installations based on housing density. 
Thus, the EPA believes that it was not necessary for Alaska also to 
consider a housing density criterion (e.g., number of dwellings per 
acre) in evaluating a potential prohibition on new wood heating-device 
installations because it would not change the conclusion that 
prohibiting new wood-heating device installations is not feasible in 
the FNSB NAA.
    In addition, we note that for a specific category of wood-heating 
devices, hydronic heaters, Alaska evaluated and implemented a setback 
requirement that prohibits new installations that are less than 330 
feet from the property line. One purpose of this requirement is to 
restrict these sources, which typically emit larger amounts of 
pollutants, to less densely populated areas. In the 2017 Clarification, 
Alaska describes the effect of this control measure as limiting ``the 
installation of hydronic heaters to large lots which are unlikely to 
exist in more densely populated areas.'' 2017 Clarification, p. 7. The 
hydronic heater setback requirement is thus a density-based requirement 
that is tailored to address a specific type of heating device.
    Response 1.c. Programs to improve wood-burning device operation and 
maintenance. One commenter asserted that Alaska neglected to consider 
programs to improve operation and maintenance of wood-burning stoves 
and fireplaces as a means of reducing emissions from residential wood 
combustion. We disagree that Alaska did not adequately evaluate and 
adopt programs to improve the use of residential wood heating devices. 
As we discussed in our proposal, Alaska evaluated and implemented 
public awareness and education programs on wood storage and heating 
device operation and maintenance. 82 FR 9044, February 2, 2017. We 
refer the commenter to the Alaska Department of Environmental 
Conservation's wood heating media Web page (http://dec.alaska.gov/air/anpms/pm/wshome.htm) and the Fairbanks North Star Borough local 
government's (Borough) air quality Web site (http://www.aqfairbanks.com) that contain brochures, television public service 
announcements, and videos about efficient wood-burning device operation 
and maintenance. The Borough's Web site also has an air quality pledge 
that residents can make that includes efficient wood-heating device 
operation and maintenance. If there are additional means to improve the 
operation and maintenance of wood stoves, we anticipate that Alaska 
will evaluate them during the development of the Serious area plan for 
the FNSB NAA.
    Response 1.d. Installer training and certification programs for 
wood stove installers. One commenter stated that the EPA should not 
approve the FNSB Moderate Plan because Alaska did not consider 
implementing a training and certification program for residential wood 
combustion (RWC) device installers that was described in a 1989 EPA 
guidance document (1989 RWC Guidance).\3\ The 1989 RWC Guidance 
describes a state or local installer certification program that would 
offer a course in proper RWC device installation and design as a means 
of minimizing emissions from wood stoves.\4\ 1989 RWC Guidance, p. 3-
11. The EPA acknowledges that the 1989 RWC Guidance document remains in 
effect. However, since the publication of the 1989 RWC Guidance, 
national installer training and certification programs, such as the 
National Fireplace Institute (NFI) and the Chimney Safety Institute of 
America (CSIA), have come into existence. The EPA has confirmed that 
these national certifications are available to installers in the FNSB 
NAA and that there are currently seven certified installers in the 
area. See ``NFI CSIA FNSB Certification

[[Page 42460]]

List'' in the docket for this action. We believe that the guidance 
recommendation for states to consider a state or local training and 
certification program for wood stove installers is adequately addressed 
in the FNSB NAA by the existence of national certification programs.
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    \3\ Guidance Document for Residential Wood Combustion Emission 
Control Measures. EPA-450/2-89-015. September 1989. Available at 
https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/documents/epa-450-2-89-015.pdf.
    \4\ The 1989 RWC Guidance explains that, other than the New 
Source Performance Standards, the measures discussed in the document 
are not ``national measures.'' 1989 RWC Guidance, p. 1-1. We 
therefore, interpret the installer certification program described 
in the 1989 RWC Guidance to be a state or local program.
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    As discussed in the 1989 RWC Guidance, the effectiveness of an 
installer certification program depends in part on the extent to which 
installers and consumers participate in the programs. 1989 RWC Guidance 
p. 3-12. During development of the FNSB Moderate Plan, Alaska 
considered and responded to public comments about installation and 
certification programs by explaining that it had added to its outreach 
materials for users of wood stoves the EPA's recommendation for 
consumers to use certified installers. See FNSB Moderate Plan, appendix 
III.D.5.13-151. Additionally, although not a control measure in the 
FNSB Moderate Plan, we note that the EPA has awarded Alaska funding for 
a changeout program for the FNSB NAA that will provide funds to 
encourage users to replace old wood and pellet appliances and 
fireplaces with new EPA certified appliances or with oil or natural gas 
appliances that will help reduce emissions. The EPA grant providing 
these funds requires that participants in the program have the 
replacement appliances installed by a certified installer, a contracted 
hearth retailer, or a contractor under the approval and supervision of 
a contracted hearth retailer. This program is funded by the EPA's 
Targeted Airshed Grant and was awarded to Alaska on July 18, 2017.\5\ 
Finally, we anticipate that Alaska will further evaluate how to 
regulate emissions from wood stoves for purposes of meeting the BACM/
BACT requirement in the Serious SIP, and this should include 
consideration of additional ways to encourage correct wood stove 
installations.
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    \5\ See U.S. EPA Grant Agreement 01J30601 to the Alaska 
Department of Environmental Conservation, August 8, 2017, available 
in the docket for this action.
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    Response 1.e. Operating limitations on wood-heating facilities. One 
commenter stated that Alaska failed to consider operating limitations 
for sources such as requirements in site plans ``that wood-heating 
facilities operate during limited hours per year.'' We interpret the 
commenter's concern to refer to the type of operating plans typical for 
major stationary sources, in which a source might be subject to 
restricted hours of operation as one means of reducing emissions. 
Although the FNSB Moderate Plan identified wood heating as a primary 
source of PM2.5 in the area, major stationary wood-heating 
facilities, for which a site operating plan might be appropriate, were 
not identified as a source category in the emissions inventory and 
therefore no analysis of control measures was required. See 40 CFR 
51.1009(a)(1). Accordingly, we do not believe it was necessary for 
Alaska to evaluate and impose this type of measure, given the absence 
of relevant sources. The EPA notes, however, that the FNSB Moderate 
Plan includes a more broadly applicable mandatory curtailment program 
that has limitations on the operation of wood-heating devices when 
PM2.5 ambient levels are forecasted to reach high values. 
See 82 FR 9043, February 2, 2017.
    Response 1.f. Wood gasification and partial carbon capture and 
storage. One commenter suggested that Alaska's RACM/RACT analysis 
should have considered wood gasification and partial carbon capture and 
storage as an energy efficiency measure. The EPA disagrees that an 
analysis of these technologies is appropriate for a PM2.5 
nonattainment area plan. These technologies are generally designed to 
reduce carbon dioxide emissions and are not considered viable control 
measures for reducing PM2.5.
    Comment 2: Partial implementation was not considered. One commenter 
stated that the EPA should not approve the FNSB Moderate Plan because 
Alaska failed to consider the feasibility of implementing control 
measures in part, even if it concluded that full implementation of the 
measures was infeasible. The commenter suggested that the following 
control measures ``might be implemented in stages or by employing a 
more targeted approach'' (i) a ban on green wood sales; (ii) a 
requirement that all hydronic heaters be certified or have retrofits; 
(iii) a requirement that uncertified stoves in rental units be 
replaced; (iv) a requirement that rental units have alternate sources 
of heat; and (v) a requirement that new constructions have alternate 
sources of heat.
    Response 2: We disagree with the claim that the EPA must disapprove 
the FNSB Moderate Plan because Alaska failed to assess partial 
implementation of the five control measures identified by the 
commenter. As discussed in the following paragraphs, Alaska either 
fully or partially implemented the control measures, or adequately 
addressed emissions in other ways that obviated the need to control the 
emissions through partial implementation of the control measures.
    Response 2.a. Ban on green wood sales. Alaska rejected banning 
green wood sales (i.e., wood that has a moisture content greater than 
20%) based on technological infeasibility. However, Alaska adopted 
other control measures that address the moisture content of wood to 
reduce emissions. First, wood sellers in the FNSB NAA are required to 
register with the State and they must disclose the moisture content of 
wood they sell to consumers. This will serve to assure that users of 
purchased wood will be on notice of the moisture content. Second, 
burning green wood in wood-fired heaters is prohibited in the FNSB NAA. 
This, in conjunction with the requirement on sellers to disclose 
moisture content, will serve to assure that purchasers will not burn 
green wood. The EPA considers the requirement to disclose the moisture 
content of wood for sale in conjunction with the prohibition on burning 
wet wood to be an adequate approach to reducing emissions from green 
wood for purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan. It is unclear how the 
commenter's recommended partial implementation of a ban on green wood 
sales would accomplish additional emission reductions beyond the 
approaches already adopted by Alaska.
    Response 2.b. Require all hydronic heaters to be certified or have 
retrofits. Alaska concluded that it was not feasible to require that 
all existing hydronic heaters in the FNSB NAA be replaced with 
specified certified models or to require retrofits for such heaters. 
However, the FNSB Moderate Plan includes a Borough code requirement 
that an owner of an existing uncertified hydronic heater that has had 
two or more violations of certain Borough code emissions provisions 
must remove the device, unless certain conditions are met. 
Additionally, Alaska required that all hydronic heaters installed after 
February 28, 2015 be qualified under the EPA's Phase 2 program or meet 
certain emission standards. We also note that owners of existing 
hydronic heaters are eligible to receive incentives for removal or 
replacement of the devices through the Borough's changeout program. 
Furthermore, all hydronic heaters are subject to a 20 percent opacity 
limit, a requirement to use dry wood, and must comply with wood heating 
curtailments. Also, hydronic heaters that do not meet certain emission 
standards must be removed upon conveyance of property. Through this 
suite of overlapping requirements, we believe that Alaska has 
adequately addressed emissions from uncertified hydronic heaters for

[[Page 42461]]

purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan. The EPA expects that Alaska will 
evaluate the need for further controls, such as expanded changeout 
incentives or retrofits to existing uncertified hydronic heaters, as 
part of the BACM/BACT analysis for the Serious area attainment plan for 
this area.
    Response 2.c. Replace uncertified stoves in rental units. The FNSB 
Moderate Plan includes a requirement that uncertified wood-fired 
heating devices must be removed when a property is leased. The 
requirement became effective on June 9, 2017. Because this control 
measure has been fully implemented, consideration of partial 
implementation is unnecessary. We note that the wood heating device 
emission standards in the FNSB Moderate Plan do not allow the 
installation of uncertified devices. Therefore, once an uncertified 
wood stove has been removed from a rental unit, it cannot be replaced 
with an uncertified device.
    Response 2.d. Require rental units to have alternate sources of 
heat. In the FNSB Moderate Plan, Alaska explained that surveys from 
2011-2015 indicated that only 5.6% of households surveyed had wood as a 
sole source of heat. See 2017 Clarification, p. 12. This number 
included both rental and owner occupied homes, so presumably the number 
of rental units without alternative sources of heat would be smaller. 
We note, however, that the FNSB Moderate plan does not allow owners of 
newly constructed buildings, including rental properties, to obtain a 
``no other adequate source of heat'' (NOASH) determination. A NOASH 
determination allows a person to use a solid fuel or waste oil burning 
appliance during a stage 2 or stage 3 curtailment. To qualify for a 
NOASH determination, a building owner or manager must file an 
application with the Borough confirming that the building has no 
adequate heating source other than a solid fuel or waste oil burning 
appliance, that economic hardships require the use of a solid fuel 
waste oil burning appliance, or that complying with a curtailment would 
result in damage to property. Prohibiting newly constructed buildings, 
including rental properties, from obtaining a NOASH determination 
functionally requires the installation of alternate sources of heat so 
that the building occupants can comply with wood heating curtailments. 
We anticipate that Alaska will revisit further controls for rental 
units in developing its Serious area attainment plan.
    Response 2.e. Require new construction to have alternate sources of 
heat. As discussed previously, a provision that addresses this control 
measure was included in the FNSB Moderate plan. The provision excludes 
owners of newly constructed buildings from obtaining a NOASH 
determination which functionally requires the installation of alternate 
sources of heat in new buildings so that the building occupants can 
comply with wood heating curtailments.
    Comment 3: One commenter stated that the technological feasibility 
analysis in the FNSB Moderate Plan is inadequate because Alaska took 
the position that it was impeded from implementing certain control 
measures due to local opposition evidenced by a citizen's referendum 
prohibiting regulation of home heating sources, and that when the 
referendum was lifted, Alaska continued to dismiss the control measures 
due to insufficient time to revise the Moderate area attainment plan. 
This commenter also stated that not enough has been done to render the 
2014 submission compliant with the CAA.
    Response 3: We acknowledge that Alaska's initial December 2014 
submission cited a citizen's referendum as a basis for not adopting 
many potential control measures. As we explained in our proposal, the 
EPA does not view social acceptability, including the citizen's 
referendum prohibiting regulation of home heating sources in any 
manner, to be an appropriate basis for rejecting required emission 
control measures. See 82 FR 9045, February 2, 2017.
    Significantly, however, the situation about which the commenter was 
concerned has changed because the referendum no longer applies and 
Alaska has evaluated additional control measures for inclusion in the 
FNSB Moderate Plan. Alaska provided supplemental SIP submissions, 
supported by clarifying information, that analyzed the control measures 
that it previously considered infeasible due to the citizen's 
referendum, including the control measures identified by the commenter. 
Based on this revised analysis, Alaska adopted some additional control 
measures, such as the mandatory solid-fuel heating device curtailment 
program, but continued to find some control measures infeasible for 
reasons unrelated to the expired referendum, such as the ban on green 
wood sales.
    Alaska's supplemental submissions provided additional control 
measures and an updated and revised analysis for certain components of 
the FNSB Moderate Plan to ensure that the EPA could evaluate and act on 
the current plan. As a result, and as the commenter notes, there is 
some information in the original submission that is outdated and that 
was made extraneous by the supplemental submissions. However, the 
supplemental submissions clearly identify the portions of the original 
submission that were updated and revised and we do not believe that the 
extraneous material that remains in the original submission is a basis 
for disapproving the FNSB Moderate Plan. As explained in response to 
comments concerning specific potential control measures, we have 
concluded that Alaska's evaluation of the measures is adequate for 
purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan.
    Comment 4: One commenter argued that the EPA cannot approve the 
FNSB Moderate Plan because Alaska made errors in reasoning. The 
commenter provided as an example, Alaska's assessment of a ban on new 
installations of hydronic heaters and the assumption that such a ban 
could have the negative effect of prolonging the use of older devices 
because new installations would be prohibited. The other example the 
commenter provided was Alaska's assumption that the benefits would be 
small for a requirement that rental units in the FNSB NAA have 
alternative heating sources.
    Response 4: We do not agree that the specific Alaska assumptions 
the commenter referenced are inappropriate, given the facts and 
circumstances in the FNSB NAA. In evaluating a potential ban on new 
installations of hydronic heaters, Alaska's primary explanation for why 
such a control was not appropriate was that ``due to arctic conditions, 
alternative sources of heat must be an available option to the public 
to protect health, life, and property.'' 2017 Clarification, p. 2. The 
assumption referenced by the commenter, that implementing such a ban 
may discourage replacement of older and higher emitting hydronic 
heaters, was an additional consideration for not banning new hydronic 
heaters installations. We believe that it was reasonable for Alaska to 
take into consideration the potential impacts that a ban on new 
hydronic heaters might have on Alaska and the Borough's ongoing efforts 
to encourage replacement of older and higher emitting devices with 
newer, cleaner burning devices. Alaska developed the FNSB Moderate Plan 
through an extensive public process and adopted a suite of controls for 
reducing the emissions from hydronic heaters that are intended to help 
bring the area into attainment. The decision not to impose

[[Page 42462]]

a ban because it might unintentionally undercut other related measures 
is not unreasonable. We anticipate that Alaska will further evaluate 
this emissions source as part of its development of the Serious area 
plan for the FNSB NAA.
    Regarding Alaska's statement that the benefits are assumed to be 
small for requiring alternate sources of heat in rental units, we 
believe that Alaska made reasonable assumptions based on the latest 
information available at the time. For example, Alaska explained that 
surveys from 2011-2015 indicated that only 5.6% of households surveyed 
had wood as a sole source of heat. See 2017 Clarification, p. 12. This 
number included both rental and owner-occupied homes, so presumably the 
number of rental units without alternative sources of heat would be 
smaller. We anticipate that Alaska will revisit the analysis of rental 
units with updated information in developing its Serious area 
attainment plan.
    Comment 5: One commenter argued that the wood-fuel cost assessment 
in the FNSB Moderate Plan is incomplete because it does not accurately 
reflect the full cost of burning wood as a fuel, such as the value of a 
homeowner's time and the cost of ash disposal, and the fact that more 
fuel is needed to heat a building in Fairbanks than in the rest of the 
country.
    Response 5: We agree with the commenter that an economic 
feasibility analysis should include a range of costs associated with 
potential control measures for a given type of emissions source. 
Considerations of economic infeasibility are used to exclude control 
measures during the RACT/RACM analysis. The EPA notes, however, that 
Alaska did not reject any control measures based on the costs 
associated with use of wood as a fuel. The cost assessment referenced 
by the commenter provided background information on mandatory 
curtailment programs as a potential control measure. See FNSB Moderate 
Plan appendix III.D.5.7-16. In the initial FNSB Moderate Plan, Alaska 
considered the mandatory curtailment program to be technologically 
infeasible. See FNSB Moderate Plan appendix III.D.5.7-27, 32, 39. 
Alaska did not conduct an economic feasibility analysis on any wood 
heating control measure found to be technologically infeasible. As 
discussed in our proposal, Alaska provided a supplemental submission 
supported by clarifying information that reevaluated the technological 
feasibility of various control measures and adopted and implemented the 
mandatory curtailment program that was the subject of the earlier cost 
analysis referenced by the commenter. See 82 FR 9045, February 2, 2017.
    Comment 6: One commenter alleged that Alaska's RACT conclusion ``is 
flawed, at least with respect to the control of sulfur dioxide 
(SO2) at local power plants,'' and that Alaska 
``unjustifiably concluded that the current level of controls meets 
RACT.'' The commenter referred to dispersion modeling and the 
speciation analysis in the FNSB Moderate Plan to show that 
SO2 precursor emissions from major stationary sources 
contribute to exceedances of the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.
    Response 6: The EPA agrees that SO2 emissions from major 
stationary sources contribute to the PM2.5 concentrations in 
the FNSB NAA, as does Alaska. We did not propose to approve, nor did 
Alaska provide, a demonstration that SO2 emissions from 
stationary sources were insignificant in the formation of ambient 
PM2.5 concentrations in the FNSB NAA. Accordingly, 
SO2 is a precursor that Alaska evaluated for emission 
controls in this area for purposes of attaining the 2006 24-hour 
PM2.5 NAAQS.
    As explained in our proposed approval of the FNSB Moderate Plan 
with respect to this issue, Alaska conducted a technical and economic 
feasibility analysis of RACT-level SO2 controls for major 
stationary sources in the FNSB NAA and concluded that additional 
controls beyond those already in place were not feasible. 82 FR 9044, 
February 2, 2017. The EPA has explained that a state could demonstrate 
that an existing source in an area should not be subject to a specific 
control technology especially where such technology is unreasonable in 
light of the area's attainment needs, or where such technology is 
infeasible. In such a case, a state could conclude that no control 
technology is ``reasonably available,'' and thus RACT for the source 
could be the existing emission controls rather than additional 
controls. See 81 FR 58034, August 24, 2016.
    Additionally, the commenter did not identify any specific 
deficiencies with respect to Alaska's RACT analysis for SO2 
emissions from major stationary sources for the EPA to evaluate the 
claim that Alaska's conclusion is unjustified. The EPA finds that 
Alaska adequately justified its conclusions that its stationary source 
control measures represent the adoption of reasonable control measures 
that meet RACM/RACT requirements for purposes of the Moderate FNSB Plan 
for the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS. We note that the FNSB NAA 
has been reclassified from Moderate to Serious, and thus Alaska will be 
required to conduct a BACM/BACT analysis for potential control measures 
for the Serious area attainment plan. 82 FR 21711, May 10, 2017. 
Accordingly, Alaska's conclusion that additional SO2 
emissions controls for these stationary sources were not feasible for 
purposes of meeting RACM/RACT requirements must be revisited in the 
context of the more stringent BACM/BACT analysis for the Serious area 
attainment plan.
    Comment 7: We received two comments that expressed concern 
regarding the availability of natural gas as an alternative fuel in the 
FNSB NAA. One commenter stated that Alaska has failed to supply the 
area with natural gas, that the infrastructure is not in place, and 
that the area is years away from having natural gas. Another commenter 
identified language in the FNSB Moderate Plan in which Alaska discussed 
the possibility of a public-private partnership for bringing additional 
natural gas to the community that has not yet occurred. This commenter 
stated that ``to the extent the SIP relies upon these references, it 
cannot be approved.''
    Response 7: The commenters are correct that Alaska has been 
exploring the expanded use of natural gas as an alternative fuel in the 
FNSB NAA as a potential means of helping to reduce emissions and to 
attain the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS, but thus far natural 
gas is not widely available in the area. To provide natural gas at 
scale, significant investments of time and money are needed to 
construct the infrastructure to deliver natural gas to Fairbanks and to 
distribute it to consumers. Thus, in the FNSB Moderate Plan, Alaska 
described plans to seek to expand the availability of natural gas in 
the future. Because natural gas is currently not available at a 
meaningful scale it was not included as part of Alaska's control 
strategy analysis and Alaska did not take credit for emissions 
reductions related to natural gas in the FNSB Moderate Plan.\6\ 
Alaska's discussion of potential expansion of natural gas in the FNSB 
Moderate Plan is not a basis for disapproval of the FNSB Moderate Plan. 
Because of the potential emission reduction benefits, the EPA supports 
efforts by Alaska to

[[Page 42463]]

expand the availability of natural gas in the FNSB NAA in the future.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ As we discussed in our proposed rule, Alaska provided a 2019 
inventory for informational purposes. See 82 FR 9037, February 2, 
2017. Although the 2019 inventory included emissions reductions 
estimated from potential future expansion of reliance on natural 
gas, this informational inventory was not relied on in the SIP nor 
was it a required element for the FNSB Moderate plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Comment 8: One commenter objected to the EPA's statement in the 
proposal that Fairbanks was relatively new to programs for reducing 
emissions from wood heating and, prior to 2015, the community had not 
experienced mandatory curtailments on solid-fuel heating devices. The 
commenter claimed that this statement was used to justify limitations 
on the applicability of the curtailment requirements for solid fuel 
heating devices in the FNSB Moderate Plan.
    Response 8: We disagree with the commenter's characterization of 
the statement in the proposal as the EPA's justification for approval 
of Alaska's curtailment requirements, including certain limitations on 
those requirements. In the sentence preceding the one cited by the 
commenter, we provided the reasons for our conclusion that the 
limitations on the applicability of the curtailment requirements are 
appropriate: ``The EPA concludes that in the FNSB NAA, where wintertime 
temperatures can be extreme and there is limited availability of fuel 
alternatives such as natural gas, the three limitations in Alaska's 
mandatory solid-fuel heating device curtailment program similarly 
invoke public welfare considerations that are appropriate in the 
context of a Moderate area plan.'' See 82 FR 9046, February 2, 2017. In 
short, given the facts and circumstances of this area, Alaska concluded 
that it was not reasonable to prohibit the use of solid fuel heating 
devices during periods of extreme cold weather. Our conclusion 
regarding the appropriateness of the limitations that Alaska included 
in the curtailment requirements remains unchanged. The reference to the 
newness of the curtailment program questioned by the commenter was 
merely an EPA acknowledgment that a two-stage program could help to 
facilitate effective implementation of the program in the community. 
This statement is based on the EPA's experience in other nonattainment 
areas where adoption and implementation of a curtailment program has 
required efforts to increase community awareness and comprehension of 
the curtailment program in order to achieve the anticipated emissions 
reductions.
    Comment 9: One commenter objected to our proposal to approve, as 
SIP strengthening, the control measures that Alaska submitted as 
contingency measures in the FNSB Moderate Plan. The commenter explained 
that Alaska did not provide a justification for not implementing these 
control measures immediately and that they must be included in the RACM 
analysis and adopted immediately. In other words, the commenter 
asserted that Alaska could not set aside these control measures to meet 
the CAA section 172(c)(9) requirement for contingency measures because 
Alaska was required to impose these measures to meet the RACM/RACT 
requirement instead.
    Response 9: The control measures the EPA proposed to approve as 
SIP-strengthening measures are: (1) A requirement that uncertified 
wood-fired heating devices be removed when a property is sold, leased, 
or conveyed, and (2) a mandatory wood seller registration and wood 
moisture disclosure program. See 82 FR 9052, February 2, 2017. 
Specifically, we are approving 18 AAC 50.076(d)-(i) and 18 AAC 
50.077(a)(2)(B). These provisions will become federally enforceable 
upon the effective date of this action. However, we disagree with the 
commenter's assertion that Alaska did not evaluate these control 
measures as potential RACM/RACT measures. Alaska evaluated both of 
these control measures and they have been implemented. See 2017 
Clarification pp. 3-5. The requirement that uncertified wood-fired 
heating devices be removed when a property is sold, leased, or conveyed 
became effective on June 9, 2017 and the mandatory wood seller 
registration and wood moisture disclosure program became effective on 
August 15, 2017.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ See the following Alaska Department of Environmental 
Conservation documents in the docket for this action: (1) Commercial 
Wood Seller Registration Requirement Fairbanks North Star Borough PM 
2.5 Nonattainment Area Questions and Answers and (2) 
Wood-Fired Heating Device Requirement--Remove or Replace Non 
Compliant Devices Upon Property Sale, Lease or Conveyance--Effective 
Date: June 9, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Comments on Enforcement

    Comment 10: One commenter opposed the EPA's proposed approval of 
the FNSB Moderate Plan because of concerns that the control measures in 
the plan are not enforceable. One commenter took issue with Alaska's 
enforcement authority claiming that ``outside of seeking voluntary 
compliance, the State claims that its only real enforcement mechanism 
is civil litigation.'' Another commenter stated that ``Alaska has made 
no good faith effort to secure `enforcement authority' from the Alaska 
legislature.'' This commenter also contends that ``[t]he state 
legislature granted $350 Million dollars to privately owned refineries 
and a shuttered Agrium Fertilizer plant, yet claims they lack resources 
to implement regulations and enforce them.''
    Response 10: We agree that states must have authority to enforce 
the requirements of their SIPs to meet various CAA requirements, 
including CAA section 110(a)(1), 110(a)(2)(C), and 110(a)(2)(E). We 
disagree with the commenter, however, that Alaska lacks the required 
enforcement authority. States are required to have a SIP that provides 
for the implementation, maintenance, and enforcement of the NAAQS. 
Whenever the EPA promulgates a new or revised NAAQS, the CAA requires 
states to make a SIP submission, commonly known as an ``infrastructure 
SIP'' to establish that they meet a host of requirements including 
those pertaining to general enforcement authority.
    In November 2014, the EPA approved Alaska's infrastructure SIP for 
the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS. 79 FR 66651, November 10, 
2014. The EPA found that the infrastructure SIP addressed the basic 
program elements in accordance with CAA section 110(a)(1) and (2), 
including, but not limited to regulatory structure, monitoring, 
modeling, legal authority, and adequate resources necessary to 
implement, maintain, and enforce the standards. Relevant to this 
comment, the EPA found that Alaska's SIP met the CAA section 
110(a)(2)(C) requirement to include a program to provide for the 
enforcement of emission limits and other control measures in the SIP 
and also met the CAA section 110(a)(2)(E) requirement that a state 
provide necessary assurances that it has adequate authority under state 
law to carry out the SIP. Alaska's infrastructure SIP submission for 
the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS referred to Alaska Statute (AS) 
46.14.030 State Air Quality Control Plan which provides the Alaska 
Department of Environmental Conservation (ADEC) statutory authority to 
act for the State and adopt regulations necessary to implement the 
State Air Quality Control Plan. It also references 18 AAC 50.030 State 
Air Quality Control Plan which provides regulatory authority to 
implement and enforce the SIP. See 79 FR 66651, November 10, 2014 and 
79 FR 41502, July 16, 2014. Furthermore, ADEC has statutory authority 
to enforce violations of air quality regulations by seeking the 
assessment of civil penalties (AS 46.030.760) and criminal penalties 
(AS 46.030.790). The EPA's analysis of the adequacy of enforcement 
authority is premised on whether a state has legal authority to enforce 
the SIP. The commenter's concern that ADEC may opt to seek voluntary 
compliance does not negate the fact that it has the

[[Page 42464]]

necessary enforcement authority to require compliance with the SIP. A 
state's election to seek voluntary compliance rather than proceeding to 
judicial enforcement is an exercise of enforcement discretion. The EPA 
notes that a state's exercise of enforcement discretion does not affect 
the ability of the EPA to pursue enforcement under CAA section 113 or 
others pursuant to the citizen's suit provision in CAA section 304.
    We also disagree with the comment suggesting that ADEC must justify 
the absence of administrative enforcement authorities. The commenter 
argues that AS 46.14.030 generally grants authority to ADEC to adopt 
regulations to implement the SIP which could be read to include 
administrative enforcement authority. As noted previously, ADEC has 
authority to pursue civil and criminal judicial actions to enforce 
violations of the SIP and the EPA has already determined that ADEC has 
adequate authority to enforce the SIP, including the FNSB Moderate 
Plan. If the commenter believes ADEC should have additional enforcement 
authority, the appropriate venue to pursue such a concern is with ADEC 
and the Alaska State Legislature. Furthermore, as noted by the 
commenter, the Borough has authority to issue warnings and citations to 
enforce key control measures adopted at the local level, such as the 
solid-fuel heating device curtailment program. The Borough control 
measures are included in Alaska's FNSB Moderate Plan submission and 
will become a part of the federally-approved SIP.
    Another commenter contended that Alaska claimed it lacks the 
resources to implement and enforce regulations. The EPA is unaware of 
any such statement attributable to Alaska submitted as part of the FNSB 
Moderate Plan, and the commenter provided no reference or citation for 
the EPA to evaluate this claim. Accordingly, the EPA has no information 
suggesting that Alaska has stopped funding, or lacks resources to make 
progress in improving air quality in the FNSB NAA. In fact, ADEC 
currently is devoting resources to the development of a Serious area 
attainment plan and the Borough is implementing local control measures 
incorporated into the SIP. In addition, as indicated previously, the 
EPA found that in its infrastructure SIP for the 2006 24-hour 
PM2.5 NAAQS, Alaska demonstrated that it had ``adequate 
resources to implement, maintain, and enforce the standards'' and thus 
met the 110(a)(2)(E)(i) requirement for adequate resources. 79 FR 
66651, November 10, 2014.
    Comment 11: One commenter noted that control measures in SIPs must 
apply continuously and ``cannot operate as a `suite' of controls that 
only collectively apply continuous controls.'' The commenter 
specifically pointed to the -15 [deg]Fahrenheit (F) temperature 
limitation on the mandatory solid-fuel heating device curtailment 
requirement as an example of ``perhaps a defensible exception for the 
needs of the community, but one that results in the waiver of controls 
during peak periods of emissions.'' The commenter also observed that 
the EPA and citizens must have the ability to bring enforcement actions 
to assure compliance and that state and local control measures that 
shield pollution sources from enforcement are not enforceable as 
required under CAA section 110(a)(2)(A).
    Response 11: First, the EPA disagrees with the commenter's general 
contention that a suite of control measures that operate together to 
provide for continuous regulation of emissions from a source is 
inconsistent with CAA requirements. The EPA agrees that SIP emission 
limitations must limit emissions from sources on a continuous basis. 
However, it may be infeasible for a single numerical emission 
limitation or control technology to apply continuously at all times to 
some sources. In such circumstances, a state may elect to impose 
alternative emission limitations that apply to specific modes of source 
operation in order to assure that emissions from the source are, in 
fact, continuously controlled. The EPA recently restated and updated 
its policy with respect to continuous emission limitations in SIP 
provisions, noting that emission limitations as a whole must be 
continuous but that such limitations could be a combination of 
different numerical limits, control requirements or work practice 
requirements. See 80 FR 33889, June 12, 2015. Accordingly, a SIP that 
includes a combination of numerical limits or controls that are 
sufficiently stringent, and are legally and practically enforceable, 
can effectively operate together to limit emissions from a source on a 
continuous basis.
    Second, the EPA disagrees with the commenter's view that the low 
temperature limitation on the applicability of the mandatory solid-fuel 
heating device curtailment requirement necessarily constitutes an 
impermissible exemption in the emissions limitation, because the 
curtailment requirement works in conjunction with other specific 
control measures in the SIP that continue to apply and limit emissions 
from this source category even during those low temperature events. It 
is important to clarify how Alaska is combining control measures in 
order to assure that the SIP imposes continuous emission limits on 
solid fuel heating devices, even when the curtailment requirement is 
suspended during extreme cold events.
    Alaska is aware of the public health concerns associated with 
ambient PM2.5 caused by the use of solid fuel heating 
devices and devised a way to balance competing concerns about high 
PM2.5 concentrations with concerns about the need to provide 
adequate heat during extreme low temperature events for purposes of the 
FNSB Moderate Plan. When temperatures are below -15[emsp14][deg]F, the 
Borough continues to issue alerts based on the forecasted 
concentrations of PM2.5. Stage 2 alerts are called when 
PM2.5 levels are forecasted to reach 35 micrograms per cubic 
meter ([micro]g/m\3\) or more. Stage 3 alerts are called when 
PM2.5 levels are forecasted to reach 55[micro]g/m\3\ or 
more. The temperature limitation on the applicability of stage 3 alert 
requirements was included to address the public welfare concerns 
associated with precluding the use of solid-fuel heating devices during 
periods of extreme cold. Alaska explained that ``. . . the temperature 
threshold is a feature of the episode program recognizing the unique 
challenges faced by residents during periods of extreme cold. Residents 
use wood heating as a form of supplemental heat to maintain livable 
conditions and mitigate economic hardships associated with high heating 
costs.'' 2017 Clarification, p. 18.
    To address these competing concerns, Alaska and the Borough 
structured the stage 3 alert requirements to allow the continued use of 
certain devices during periods of extreme cold. When temperatures are 
below -15[emsp14][deg]F during stage 3 alerts, the prohibition on the 
use of all solid-fuel heating devices, masonry heaters, pellet fuel 
burning appliances, cook stoves, fireplaces, or waste oil burning 
appliances does not apply. However, the stage 2 prohibition on the use 
of uncertified solid-fuel heating devices and hydronic heaters that are 
not EPA Phase II qualified continues to apply. In addition, even when 
the temperature limitation on the applicability of stage 3 alerts 
applies, the users of solid-fuel heating devices must continue to meet 
the applicable opacity emission limitation and continue to comply with 
the requirement to burn only dry, properly seasoned wood (with a 
moisture content of 20% or less). Thus, the EPA believes that the 
opacity limit and dry wood

[[Page 42465]]

requirement work in conjunction with the mandatory curtailment program 
to limit emissions from solid-fuel heating devices on a continuous 
basis, even for stage 3 alerts that occur during periods of extreme 
cold.
    The EPA notes that Alaska is currently in the process of developing 
the Serious area plan for the FNSB NAA, and is reevaluating the need 
for additional emission reductions to attain the 2006 24-hour 
PM2.5 NAAQS. In particular, Alaska is considering the need 
for emissions reductions during periods of extremely low temperatures, 
which can often coincide with meteorological conditions most likely to 
result in inversions and exceedances of the 2006 24-hour 
PM2.5 NAAQS. Specifically, on July 18, 2017, Alaska proposed 
regulatory revisions to eliminate the current temperature threshold 
limitation as part of its efforts to develop a Serious area plan. The 
EPA supports the further efforts of Alaska and the Borough to address 
the difficult, but necessary issue of controlling emissions during 
periods of extreme low temperatures.
    Finally, the EPA agrees with the commenter that state and local 
control measures in the SIP need to be legally and practically 
enforceable. A core principal of the CAA is that the EPA's approval of 
a control measure into a SIP makes the measure a federally-enforceable 
component of the SIP that the State, the EPA or citizens can enforce in 
the event of violations. In this final action, the EPA is approving 
into the Alaska SIP, among other control measures, the mandatory solid-
fuel heating device curtailment program, the 20% opacity emission 
limitation, and the dry wood requirement, and these measures will 
become federally-enforceable elements of the SIP for the FNSB NAA.

C. Comments on Rules

    Comment 12: One commenter claimed that the EPA must disapprove the 
FNSB Moderate Plan because it ``includes undesirable and unlawful 
relaxations of existing SIP measures, in violation of CAA Section 
110(l).'' For this reason, the commenter objected to six specific State 
regulations that Alaska included in the FNSB Moderate Plan.
    Response 12: In light of this comment, the EPA reanalyzed the six 
regulations identified by the commenter. A comparison of the State 
regulations submitted to the EPA for review and approval into the SIP 
against existing SIP provisions is provided in the docket for this 
action. We respond in the following paragraphs to the concerns 
identified by the commenter with respect to these specific regulations. 
For the reasons stated in the following paragraphs, we disagree that 
the submitted regulations constitute relaxations, and thus the 
inclusion of these measures into the SIP as part of the FNSB Moderate 
Plan does not raise concerns related to CAA section 110(l).
    Comment 12.a. 18 AAC 50.065(f). Wood Smoke Control and PM 
2.5 Nonattainment Areas. The commenter objected to our 
approval of a provision that prohibits open burning from November 1 to 
March 31 because Alaska did ``not adequately explain how the dates for 
the open burning ban were chosen.'' The commenter expressed concern 
that exceedances of the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS may occur 
outside the November 1 to March 31 open burning prohibition season. The 
commenter also objected to language in the FNSB Moderate Plan that 
would allow a local open burn permit program to replace the current 
open burning prohibition at some point in the future because it is 
``worded so vaguely without any limits'' and does not specify ``a 
process for State approval'' or ``minimum program requirements, 
including record-keeping, public reporting, and adequate enforcement 
authority.'' Additionally, the commenter stated that ``[i]f it is 
necessary to authorize some variances to the seasonal open burn ban--
for example, for legitimate ceremonial or limited recreational 
purposes--the State should have adopted detailed regulatory language 
identifying the types of activities that might be eligible for a local 
variance and necessary conditions for any such variance.''
    Response 12.a. We disagree with the comment that Alaska did not 
adequately explain the dates of the open burning prohibition, November 
1 to March 31, in the FNSB Moderate Plan. We believe that the 
discussion of the open burning prohibition is adequate, including 
Alaska's explicit consideration of lengthening the open burning 
prohibition to include October and April. See FNSB Moderate Plan 
III.D.5.7-22. As noted by the commenter, Alaska explained that it 
analyzed air quality data for October and April and did not identify 
``significant air quality deterioration in those months as a result of 
normal open burning'' and therefore, did not lengthen the open burning 
prohibition to include those two months. Regarding the commenter's 
concern that exceedances of the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS may 
occur outside the open burning prohibition season, we note that under 
18 AAC 50.065(e), ADEC can also prohibit open burning during air 
quality advisories, which are not restricted to the open burning 
season. As provided in 18 AAC 50.065(e), the air quality advisory 
pertaining to open burning is based on a determination that there is or 
will likely be inadequate ventilation to maintain ambient air quality 
standards, including PM2.5.
    We also disagree with the commenter's assertion that the amendments 
to 18 AAC 50.065(f) are a relaxation of existing SIP measures. The 
dates of the open burning prohibition remain the same as when the EPA 
last approved 18 AAC 50.065(f) into the Alaska SIP in 1998. 63 FR 
63983, November 18, 1998. More importantly, the amendments to 18 AAC 
50.065(f) make the open burning prohibition applicable to 
PM2.5 nonattainment areas, whereas previously the 
prohibition applied only to PM10 wood smoke control areas. 
Therefore, the amendments to 18 AAC 50.065(f) that extend the 
regulation to PM2.5 nonattainment areas in fact strengthen 
the existing SIP.
    Similarly, we disagree with the commenter's view that inclusion of 
the language contemplating a potential future open burn permit program 
to replace the current open burning prohibition is a relaxation of the 
existing Alaska SIP. First, as stated previously, the current SIP-
approved regulation applies only to PM10 wood smoke control 
areas and Alaska has now extended it to PM2.5 nonattainment 
areas as well. Second, as required by 18 AAC 50.065(f)(1) and (2), if a 
local area elects to develop an open burn permit program instead of the 
current open burn prohibition, it may only do so if the program (i) 
does not cause or contribute to violations of the PM2.5 
NAAQS and (ii) is approved into the State Air Quality Control Plan as 
adopted in 18 AAC 50.030. We have determined that Alaska's amendment of 
18 AAC 50.065 to extend the open burning prohibition to 
PM2.5 nonattainment areas while simultaneously allowing the 
future option of a local air quality open burn permit program is 
therefore not a relaxation, but a strengthening of the current SIP.
    Regarding the commenter's concern that the amendment is vague and 
does not provide limits or specify a process for state approval of a 
local open burn permit program, we note that the provision does not 
itself constitute an approval of any such local open burn permit 
program. The provision merely contemplates such a permitting program in 
the future, and one that would have to meet certain requirements. For 
example, the condition in 18 AAC

[[Page 42466]]

50.065(f)(1) that a local open burn permit program cannot cause or 
contribute to violations of the PM2.5 NAAQS provides one 
appropriate limitation on potential open burn permit programs. 
Additionally, Alaska has an established process for approving plans and 
adopting them into 18 AAC 50.030. The condition in 18 AAC 50.065(f)(2) 
that the local open burn permit program must be included in the State 
Air Quality Control Plan adopted by reference in 18 AAC 50.030 provides 
an appropriate state process for evaluation and approval of any such 
potential program in the future. We also note that if Alaska seeks to 
create such an open burn permit program in the FNSB NAA in the future, 
that will require a SIP revision subject to EPA review and approval, 
including an analysis that the SIP revision would not be less stringent 
than the current SIP in accordance with the requirements of CAA 110(l). 
Alaska has confirmed that the approval of any open burn permit program 
in the future must be submitted to the EPA as a SIP revision. Alaska's 
interpretation letter is included in the docket for this action.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ See ADEC letter, Clarification regarding Open Burning 
regulation 18 AAC 50.065(f), July 13, 2017, in the docket for this 
action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With respect to the commenter's concern that the language in the 
FNSB Moderate Plan that contemplates potential future open burn permit 
programs in lieu of the prohibition on open burning is vaguely worded 
and provides no indication of ``what constitutes a lawful local air 
quality open burn permit program and no limit to the range of 
activities that might be authorized . . .'' the EPA agrees that the 
amendment leaves unaddressed many aspects of a local open burn permit 
program that would need further development and clarification. Also, as 
noted previously, any future local open burn permit program that is 
developed to operate in lieu of the open burning prohibition must be 
submitted to Alaska for incorporation into the State Air Quality 
Control Plan and then submitted to the EPA for review and approval. 
Accordingly, assuming a local open burn permit program is developed in 
the future, the appropriate time to consider the issues the commenter 
raises, e.g., the range of activities authorized by the program, 
recordkeeping and reporting requirements, adequate enforcement 
authority, and other aspects that pertain to the lawfulness of the 
program, including whether the program adequately assures that 
permitted open burning will not cause or contribute to a violation of 
the PM2.5 standard, would be when a locality develops and 
then submits such a permit program to Alaska and the EPA for review. At 
present, 18 AAC 50.065(f) merely clarifies that localities can chose to 
pursue a permit program in lieu of an outright seasonal prohibition on 
open burning. To the extent the commenter is concerned about reliance 
on a local, rather than state permitting program, we previously 
determined that Alaska provided necessary assurances that ``where the 
State has relied on a local or regional government, agency, or 
instrumentality for the implementation of any SIP provision, the State 
has responsibility for ensuring adequate implementation of the SIP'' 
with respect to the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS as required by 
CAA section 110(a)(2)(E)(iii). 79 FR 66651, November 10, 2014.
    Finally, we disagree with the commenter's suggestion that a future 
open burn permit program would have to address the process for 
variances related to ceremonial and recreational fires. We note that 
ceremonial and recreational fires are specifically excluded from 
Alaska's amended definition of open burning in 18 AAC 50.990(65)(B). 
Because these activities are not subject to the open burning 
prohibition, there would not be a need for future variances related to 
such fires. We agree, however, that to the extent a future permitting 
program may include a process for seeking variances for activities 
subject to the burn ban, provisions related to such variances should 
provide adequate definitions and specifications to allow for necessary 
implementation and enforcement, as well as evaluation by Alaska and the 
EPA before approval as a revision to the current SIP.
    Comment 12.b. 18 AAC 50.075(d). Solid Fuel-fired Heating Device 
Visible Emission Standards. The commenter objected to the addition of 
18 AAC 50.075(d) which limits solid fuel-fired heating device operation 
during PM2.5 air quality episodes. The commenter claimed 
that the provisions weaken another part of the existing SIP-approved 
portion of the regulation, paragraph (b), by providing conditions for 
lifting a prohibition on the use of wood-fired heating devices during 
an air quality episode. The commenter also objected to the provisions 
that allow for a temporary waiver from the requirement because they are 
``too broad and too discretionary.'' However, the commenter 
acknowledged that due to the ``extremely cold winter and high price of 
fuel in Fairbanks, exemptions from curtailment for a sole source of 
heat and financial hardship are an absolute necessity.'' Additionally, 
the commenter stated that Alaska should adopt a curtailment program 
similar to one in Sacramento, California. The commenter also suggested 
that ``to ease the impact of a mandatory, episodic wood-burning 
curtailment program on community members,'' Alaska should adopt a 
``fuel oil subsidy program that would help offset the additional 
expense of fuel oil use.''
    Response 12.b. The EPA disagrees that the addition of new 18 AAC 
50.075(d) creates a relaxation of existing 18 AAC 50.075(b) as 
contemplated by CAA section 110(l). We note that paragraph (b) only 
prohibits operation of a wood-fired heating device in an area for which 
Alaska has declared an air quality episode with respect to 
SO2, carbon monoxide (CO), or PM10, in accordance 
with 18 AAC 50.245. Neither 18 AAC 50.075(b) nor 18 AAC 50.245 
explicitly applied to PM2.5. Alaska has specifically added 
the new 18 AAC 50.075(d), and the related new 18 AAC 50.246, to impose 
a comparable prohibition on wood-fired heating devices in areas for 
which Alaska has declared an air quality episode specifically for 
purposes of the PM2.5 NAAQS. The existing prohibition on 
operation of wood-fired heating devices in 18 AAC 50.075(b) is thus 
unaffected by the addition of 18 AAC 50.075(d), which applies only to 
PM2.5. Furthermore, the addition of paragraph (d) provides 
limitations on solid-fuel heating device operation in PM2.5 
nonattainment areas that previously did not exist in the Alaska SIP. 
Therefore, we consider the addition of paragraph (d) to be a necessary 
strengthening of the existing SIP, not a relaxation.
    However, we believe the commenter raised valid concerns with the 
waiver provisions in 18 AAC 50.075(d)(2). The EPA is not taking final 
action on these waiver provisions because they are no longer part of 
the submitted FNSB Moderate Plan. On July 26, 2017, Alaska withdrew 18 
AAC 50.075(d)(2) from its SIP submission. The withdrawal letter is 
included in the docket for this action.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ See ADEC letter, Withdrawal of items from the State 
Implementation Plan submittal for the Fairbanks North Star Borough 
nonattainment area, July 26, 2017, in the docket for this action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With respect to the comments about the type of curtailment program 
and the suggestion that state and local officials provide a fuel oil 
subsidy, we note that states have discretion in formulating their 
attainment plans, so long as they meet the applicable requirements of 
the Act. In the FNSB NAA, Alaska has adopted a number of control 
measures

[[Page 42467]]

to address emissions from solid fuel heating devices that are designed 
to help the area attain the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS given 
the facts and circumstances of this particular area. As we stated in 
our proposed rule, we believe the mandatory solid-fuel heating device 
curtailment program in the FNSB Moderate Plan is appropriately suited 
for the FNSB NAA in that it provides for implementation of a 
curtailment program that will reduce emissions in a manner that can 
facilitate program adoption and implementation by the community. 82 FR 
9046, February 2, 2017. Again, we anticipate that Alaska will be 
reexamining its approach to controlling emissions from this source as 
part of the development of the Serious area attainment plan for the 
FNSB NAA, in order to identify and adopt BACM/BACT level controls, as 
appropriate. At that time, Alaska may reevaluate approaches that have 
been successfully adopted and implemented in other nonattainment areas 
and new approaches suggested by the public.
    Comment 12.c. 18 AAC 50.076. Solid Fuel-fired Heating Device Fuel 
Requirements; Registration of Commercial Wood Sellers. The commenter 
generally supported this regulation, which sets forth requirements for 
fuels that can be used in solid fuel-fired heating devices. However, 
the commenter expressed concern that it does not require year-round use 
of ``dry'' or ``seasoned'' wood like the Borough ordinance does and 
stated that the EPA must explicitly approve the Borough ordinance as an 
enforceable part of the SIP. In addition, the commenter stated that the 
mandatory component of Alaska's wood seller registration program should 
apply immediately, not when the area is reclassified to Serious and 
suggested that Alaska use ``a simple'' wood moisture content labeling 
program that identifies the wood as ``dry'' or ``wet.''
    Response 12.c. The EPA notes that Alaska included the provision 
identified by the commenter, Borough code 21.28.030.F, in the FNSB 
Moderate Plan in its November 23, 2016 supplemental submission. Borough 
code 21.28.030.F lists the types of fuels that cannot be burned in a 
solid-fuel heating device. This provision applies at all times and 
prohibits the burning of wood that has a moisture content greater than 
20 percent. The local rules that Alaska included in the FNSB Moderate 
Plan will become a part of the federally-approved SIP. Accordingly, 
upon the effective date of this action, Borough code 21.28.030.F will 
thus become a federally-enforceable component of the SIP applicable in 
the FNSB NAA.
    Regarding the commenter's suggestion that Alaska use a more 
simplified wood moisture labeling system for this program, such as 
``dry'' or ``wet,'' we note that states have discretion in formulating 
their attainment plans, so long as they meet the applicable 
requirements of the Act. In this instance, we believe that the method 
of labeling moisture content adopted by Alaska adequately conveys the 
necessary information to wood users to facilitate the related 
requirement to burn only dry wood, and thus the alternative form of 
labelling suggested by the commenter is not required. We are therefore 
approving Alaska's regulations, including the requirement that wood 
sellers document three moisture content measurements on the moisture 
content disclosure. The EPA notes that the mandatory component of 
Alaska's wood seller registration program was implemented on August 15, 
2017.
    Comment 12.d. 18 AAC 50.077. Standards for Wood-fired Heating 
Devices. The commenter supported Alaska's emissions standard for new 
installations of wood-fired heating devices in 18 AAC 50.077 as a 
critical step toward improving air quality in the FNSB NAA, but 
objected to the ``scaling of the standard'' and asserted that there 
``should be no exception for small or large devices'' and that 
``devices larger than 350,000 BTUs should be required to meet the same 
emissions standard.'' The commenter also stated that Alaska failed to 
give a reasonable justification for not strengthening 18 AAC 50.077 by 
establishing an emission standard for coal burning devices. 
Additionally, the commenter expressed concern that wood-fired heating 
devices that do not meet the 18 AAC 50.077 emission standards can be 
sold if they are to be installed outside the FNSB NAA and that only a 
written confirmation is required from the buyer stating that the device 
will be installed and used in an area other than the FNSB NAA. The 
commenter requested that the address where the non-conforming device 
will be installed should be included in the confirmation, that the 
confirmation be notarized, and that sellers be required to keep the 
confirmation for 5 years. Although not directly related to 18 AAC 
50.077, the commenter also stated that the requirement for replacing 
uncertified wood stoves at time of home sale should be adopted and 
implemented immediately, rather than set aside for future 
implementation as a contingency measure in the FNSB Moderate Plan.
    Response 12.d. The EPA agrees with the commenter that it is 
important that solid-fuel heating devices that are to be installed in 
the FNSB NAA meet stringent emissions standards. Alaska's emissions 
standards for wood-fired heating devices in 18 AAC 50.077 are similar 
to, or more stringent than, the EPA's current New Source Performance 
Standards for new residential wood heaters and hydronic heaters (wood 
heater NSPS). 80 FR 13672, March 16, 2015. However, we believe the 
commenter is incorrect in claiming that 18 AAC 50.077 contains 
exemptions based on device size because all devices are addressed, 
whether they are rated under 350,000 Btu per hour or greater than 
350,000 Btu per hour. The provisions in 18 AAC 50.077(b) and (c) 
provide emissions standards for devices ``rated under 350,000 Btu per 
hour'' for hydronic heaters and wood stoves, respectively, whereas 18 
AAC 50.077(d) provides emissions standards for wood-fired heating 
devices that have a ``rated size of 350,000 Btu or greater per hour.'' 
Thus, 18 AAC 50.077 does not contain the exemptions described by the 
commenter. Additionally, 18 AAC 50.077(b), (c), and (d) each require 
devices to meet EPA standards or meet the same ``particulate matter 
annual average emission limit of 2.5 grams per hour.''
    We disagree with the comment that Alaska did not establish emission 
standards for new coal-burning device installations in the FNSB 
Moderate Plan. Although the commenter is correct that 18 AAC 50.077 
does not establish such emission standards, the emission standards for 
``Borough listed appliances'' in section 020 of Borough code chapter 
21.28 apply to coal heating devices. Additionally, section 030.A 
prohibits the installation of a solid fuel burning appliance in the 
FNSB NAA if the appliance is not listed by the Borough. We note that 
``solid fuel burning appliance'' is defined in section 010 to include 
coal stoves, coal-fired hydronic heaters, and coal-fired furnaces. 
Alaska adopted Borough code chapter 21.28 sections 010, 020, and 030 
into the FNSB Moderate Plan that was submitted to the EPA on November 
23, 2016. Upon the effective date of this action, these Borough 
provisions will be adopted into the federally-approved SIP. Thus, 
Alaska has imposed emission controls on coal fired stoves in the FNSB 
NAA sufficient for purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan. Alaska 
acknowledged the public health concerns associated with emissions from 
coal fired stoves in the FNSB Moderate Plan and the EPA anticipates 
that Alaska will further evaluate potential controls for these sources 
in

[[Page 42468]]

the development of the Serious area plan.
    We also disagree with the commenter regarding the need to revise 
the written confirmation requirements in 18 AAC 50.077(f) for sales of 
wood-fired heating devices to be installed outside of the FNSB NAA to 
include additional requirements such as notarization and retention of 
forms. The requirements of 18 AAC 50.077(f) specify that all new wood-
fired heating devices to be installed or used in the FNSB NAA must meet 
certain emission standards and provides that a person who intends to 
sell or otherwise convey a wood-fired heating device that does not meet 
those standards must receive written confirmation from the buyer or 
operator that the device will not be installed or used in the FNSB NAA. 
The EPA believes that this provision provides sufficient notice (in 
addition to the regulatory text of 18 AAC 50.077 and other education 
and outreach efforts conducted by ADEC and the Borough) to potential 
buyers of the prohibition on such installations in the FNSB NAA and 
adequately documents their awareness and agreement to comply. Although 
the additional requirements suggested by the commenter may be helpful, 
we believe the current requirements devised by Alaska are sufficient.
    With respect to the comment that Alaska should implement 
immediately the requirement for replacing uncertified wood stoves at 
the time of home sale, rather than implement it as a future contingency 
measure, the EPA notes that the measure has been implemented. The 
requirement became effective on June 9, 2017, the effective date of 
reclassification of the area to Serious. 82 FR 21711, May 10, 2017.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \10\ See ADEC letter Wood-Fired Heating Device Requirement--
Remove or Replace Non Compliant Devices Upon Property Sale, Lease or 
Conveyance--Effective Date: June 9, 2017, in the docket for this 
action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Comment 12.e. 18 AAC 50.246. Air Quality Episodes and Advisories 
for PM2.5. The commenter expressed concerns that compliance with 
curtailments remain voluntary under the 18 AAC 50.246 provisions for 
PM2.5 air quality episodes and advisories and that the 
provisions ``do not protect public health in Fairbanks or promote 
attainment of the 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.'' The commenter also 
objected to the lack of a definition for the word ``curtailment.''
    Response 12.e. First, we disagree with the commenter's concern 
about the absence of a specific definition of the term curtailment. In 
Alaska's current SIP-approved regulations and the regulations submitted 
with the FNSB Moderate Plan, the word ``curtailment'' is used in a 
general sense and does not apply to a particular category of sources. 
Therefore, we do not take issue with the use of the word 
``curtailment'' in 18 AAC 50.246 or the fact that it lacks a specific 
regulatory definition.
    Second, we acknowledge that under 18 AAC 50.246(c)(1), curtailments 
are voluntary ``from any person issued a permit under this chapter 
whose stationary source's emissions might impact the area subject to 
the advisory.'' Thus, the commenter is correct that compliance with the 
curtailment contemplated in this provision is voluntary for the 
affected stationary sources (Alaska defines ``stationary source'' in AS 
46.14.990 as ``any building, structure, facility, or installation which 
emits or may emit a regulated NSR pollutant''). However, we note that 
18 AAC 50.246(c)(1) applies only to permitted stationary sources and it 
applies statewide.
    By contrast, Alaska has adopted a mandatory curtailment program for 
the FNSB NAA that applies to all solid-fuel heating devices in the 
event that Alaska or the Borough issues an alert based on high ambient 
PM2.5 levels. Compliance with the solid-fuel heating device 
curtailment is mandatory, not voluntary. We believe that the provision 
at 18 AAC 50.075(e), in conjunction with 18 AAC 50.246, provides Alaska 
authority to prohibit the operation of solid-fuel heating devices in 
the FNSB NAA. The prohibition on the operation of solid-fuel heating 
devices issued under 18 AAC 50.075(e) and Borough code 21.28.050 
provide Alaska the ability to implement advisories and prescribe 
actions as a backstop to the Borough's existing solid-fuel heating 
device curtailment program, which is incorporated in the State Air 
Quality Control Plan, adopted by reference in 18 AAC 50.030, and is 
also being adopted into the federally-approved SIP in this action. 
Specifically, Borough code 21.28.050 requires the issuance of 
advisories or alerts when PM2.5 concentrations are expected 
to reach certain levels (defined as Stage 1, Stage 2 and Stage 3). 
These alerts impose mandatory restrictions on the operation of solid-
fuel heating devices in the FNSB NAA, or specified Air Quality Control 
Zone. Accordingly, both Alaska and the Borough have authority to impose 
a mandatory curtailment on the operation of solid-fuel heating devices 
during PM2.5 air quality episodes. See FNSB Moderate Plan 
III.D.5.11-3.
    Comment 12.f. 18 AAC 50.245(b) and (c). Air Quality Episodes and 
Advisories for Air Pollutants other than PM2.5. The commenter noted 
that the current version of 18 AAC 50.245 approved into the Alaska SIP 
provides that ADEC will declare air quality advisories. In the FNSB 
Moderate Plan, Alaska has revised the rule to provide that either ADEC 
``or a local air quality control program'' will declare the advisories. 
The commenter objected to these revisions because ``they do not specify 
a single authority responsible for air alerts'' and ``there is 
potential for confusion and inaction.'' The commenter also stated that 
Alaska ``should not delegate authority to a local air quality control 
program that is unwilling or unable to fully implement regulatory 
requirements.''
    Response 12.f. The EPA disagrees that authorizing the relevant 
local air quality control program (i.e., here the Borough) to declare 
advisories, as well as ADEC, is an inappropriate revision of the 
existing SIP. Under 18 AAC 50.245, ADEC or a local air quality control 
program may declare air quality episodes and advisories for 
SO2, PM10, and CO.\11\ The commenter's concern 
about potential confusion in areas that have a local air quality 
program, such as the FNSB NAA, is addressed by the requirements of AS 
46.14.400, which provides authority for ADEC to authorize local air 
quality control programs to operate in lieu of ADEC's air quality 
program. Under AS 46.14.400(d), a cooperative agreement between ADEC 
and the local air quality district must specify, among other things, 
the respective duties and enforcement responsibilities of the local air 
quality district and ADEC. Thus, where a local air quality district has 
been authorized to administer a local air quality control program and 
declare alerts, the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) specifies that 
responsibility. The MOU between ADEC and the Borough (ADEC-FNSB MOU) 
was submitted with the FNSB Moderate Plan. FNSB Moderate Plan appendix 
III.D.5.12-54. It specifies that the Borough will ``continue to 
implement, as needed, the Borough's emergency episode prevention and 
response plan for CO.'' The ADEC-FNSB MOU does not identify the Borough 
as the authority for declaring alerts for SO2 and 
PM10, thus ADEC would declare those air alerts. The EPA 
believes that although 18 AAC 50.245 does not specify one authority for 
calling SO2, PM10, and CO alerts, the MOU 
required by Alaska statute adequately specifies the entity responsible 
for calling alerts when it is not ADEC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ The EPA notes that Alaska addresses PM2.5 air 
quality episodes and advisories in 18 AAC 50.246.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 42469]]

    We also believe that the requirements of AS 46.14.400(d) address 
the commenter's concern that Alaska should not delegate authority to a 
local air quality control program that is unwilling or unable to fully 
implement regulatory requirements. The cooperative agreement must 
specify the respective enforcement responsibilities of the local air 
quality district and ADEC. According to the ADEC-FNSB MOU, ADEC has 
enforcement responsibility for all currently permitted facilities that 
are under ADEC authority. ADEC and the Borough have joint 
responsibility for responding to public complaints about air pollution 
within the Borough. The ADEC-FNSB MOU provides a flow chart for 
identifying appropriate enforcement actions for the Borough to take, 
for ADEC to take, or for joint enforcement actions. See FNSB Moderate 
Plan appendix III.D.5.12-57. Additionally, as we stated earlier, Alaska 
has provided necessary assurances that ``where the State has relied on 
a local or regional government, agency, or instrumentality for the 
implementation of any SIP provision, the State has responsibility for 
ensuring adequate implementation of the SIP'' with respect to the 2006 
24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS as required by CAA section 
110(a)(2)(E)(iii). 79 FR 66651, November 10, 2014. In the event that a 
local air quality control program is not meeting its responsibilities, 
the EPA anticipates that Alaska will take appropriate steps to assure 
that the SIP is properly implemented and enforced within all areas of 
the state, as required by the CAA.

D. Other Comments

    Comment 13: Two commenters expressed concern about the high 
PM2.5 values recorded by ambient air quality monitors in the 
FNSB NAA. One commenter noted that ``the North Pole Fire Station 
monitor currently records the highest values in the non-attainment 
area'' and ``[t]he most recent design value was 124 [mu]g/m\3\, that 
is, 354 percent of the 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.'' The commenter 
further asserted that the ``EPA and the State have a legal and a moral 
obligation to develop a plan to clean up the Borough's polluted air.'' 
This commenter stated that ``improved regulations to address wood smoke 
and other sources of PM2.5 pollution are necessary to 
protect the health and welfare of Fairbanks residents, especially 
children in the community.'' In addition to expressing concerns about 
public health, the other commenter described personal experiences with 
health issues ``because of chronically poor air quality'' and stated 
that ``[a]nother study of premature mortality in our area is needed.'' 
This commenter also expressed concerns about air quality monitoring, 
claiming that the ``air quality is getting worse,'' that Alaska has 
tried ``to disprove monitoring data from a Neighborhood site in North 
Pole by claiming it is a microliter,'' and that Alaska removed a 
special purpose monitor ``known as the Watershed Monitor from an area 
in Fairbanks where levels were recorded for many months (months in 
three consecutive years) often higher than the North Pole Monitor.'' 
The commenter also noted that a ``MetOne Neighborhood Monitor in the 
area continues to show dangerously high levels.''
    Response 13: We agree with the concerns about high ambient 
PM2.5 levels in the FNSB NAA. We acknowledge that control 
measures have been adopted into the FNSB Moderate Plan to improve air 
quality and although the PM2.5 values generally have 
decreased, they remain high. However, we note that the high monitored 
PM2.5 values are not a basis for disapproval of the FNSB 
Moderate Plan. The EPA has already reclassified the FNSB NAA from 
Moderate to Serious because these high monitored values indicated 
continued nonattainment, which under CAA sections 188 and 189, imposes 
additional and more stringent attainment plan requirements. 82 FR 
21711, May 10, 2017. This reclassification obligates Alaska to 
reevaluate and strengthen its attainment plan control strategy as 
necessary to meet the more stringent Serious area requirements and to 
provide for attainment of the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS by 
the applicable Serious area attainment date. Regarding the comment that 
another study on premature mortality is needed, although such a study 
may be a valuable source of information to the community, it is not a 
requirement under the CAA as part of an attainment plan and is 
therefore beyond the scope of this action.
    In response to the comments about air quality monitors, we affirm 
that the North Pole Fire Station monitor continues to operate as a 
regulatory monitor and that it is a neighborhood scale monitor. As 
discussed in our proposal, the EPA expects that Alaska will include the 
data from the North Pole Fire Station monitor in the analyses for the 
development of a Serious area attainment plan for the FNSB NAA. 82 FR 
9037, February 2, 2017. Regarding the comment about the removal of the 
special purpose monitor, the EPA is aware that high concentrations of 
PM2.5 commonly exist in parts of the nonattainment area that 
are not routinely and continuously monitored by the Borough or the 
State. Special purpose monitors supplement the monitoring network used 
for meeting the EPA's minimum monitoring requirements found in appendix 
D of 40 CFR part 58. Monitors used for satisfying the EPA's minimum 
monitoring requirements remain at a fixed location for an extended 
period (longer than 24 months) so that air quality measurements can be 
used for regulatory decision making purposes. Special purpose 
monitoring data augment the data collected from the minimum required 
network and are used to ensure that this minimum monitoring network is 
appropriately sited and adequately represents the air quality of the 
community. As such, it is not uncommon for special purpose monitors to 
be operated for only a short duration at any given location. In its 
monitoring network plan, Alaska explained that special purpose monitors 
are moved to better understand the air quality impacts experienced in 
various neighborhoods and that the special purpose monitoring sites 
usually remain in one location for two to six weeks.\12\ In addition, 
the EPA appreciates the community's willingness to assist in citizen 
monitoring and recognizes that achieving air quality goals in the FNSB 
NAA is a collaborative effort.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ The EPA approved the 2015 Alaska annual monitoring network 
plan on October 28, 2015. See 2015 Alaska Monitoring Network 
Approval Letter in the docket for this action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Comment 14: One commenter stated that the FNSB Moderate Plan 
included ``mitigation efforts from state legislative grants obtained by 
Rep. Tammie Wilson that were not scientifically or practically carried 
out and for which no report, data, or proper accounting is available.''
    Response 14: We reviewed the FNSB Moderate Plan and did not 
identify mitigation efforts as suggested by the commenter. 
Additionally, the commenter did not provide specific information for 
the EPA to evaluate the claim that the FNSB Moderate Plan relied on 
such efforts. The EPA therefore does not find this comment to provide a 
basis for disapproval of the FNSB Moderate Plan.
    Comment 15: One commenter stated that Alaska ``claimed they can't 
meet CAA requirements without making any reasonable effort to do so.'' 
This commenter also stated that the FNSB Moderate Plan ``does not 
appear to meet the Federal requirements or especially the spirit of the 
CAA,'' and asked that ``[i]f Alaska's Moderate SIP is being accepted 
because the Administrator of

[[Page 42470]]

the EPA failed to respond within the established timeline to Alaska's 
SIP submission, then that should be made clear.''
    Response 15: The commenter did not provide specific information 
about the claims made by Alaska that they cannot meet CAA requirements. 
We have reviewed the FNSB Moderate Plan and did not identify any such 
claims. As discussed in our proposal, the EPA is approving the FNSB 
Moderate Plan because we found that it meets the substantive statutory 
and regulatory requirements for base-year and projected emissions 
inventories, precursor demonstrations, analysis and imposition of RACM/
RACT, RFP, QMs, and a demonstration that attainment by the December 31, 
2015 attainment date was impracticable. See 82 FR 9053, February 2, 
2017.
    With respect to the commenter's question concerning whether this 
approval was influenced by the timing of the action, the EPA 
acknowledges that our final action is outside of the timeline 
prescribed by the CAA. The EPA's inability to take timely action was 
the result of a number of factors including our ongoing work with 
Alaska to supplement the FNSB Moderate Plan. However, as noted 
previously, the EPA's decision to approve the FNSB Moderate Plan in 
this action is based on the content of the plan and its consistency 
with applicable statutory and regulatory requirements, and was not 
influenced by the timing of our final action.
    Comment 16: One commenter stated that because the RACM/RACT 
analysis is flawed, the impracticability and RFP demonstrations are 
inadequate. This commenter also stated that reclassification to Serious 
and the requirement that Alaska will ``have to submit amendments to its 
plan applying stricter control measures to bring the area into 
compliance, do not diminish the importance of EPA's decision on the 
State's current plan . . .'' and ``does not relax the Clean Air Act's 
requirements for the current submission.''
    Response 16: As discussed in section II.A of this preamble, we 
disagree with the comment that the RACM/RACT analysis is flawed and we 
therefore disagree with the comment that the impracticability and RFP 
demonstrations are not approvable. We agree with the comment that 
reclassification to Serious does not relax the Moderate area 
requirements. Where we discussed reclassifying the FNSB NAA to Serious 
in our proposal, our intention was to explain that although Alaska and 
the EPA considered certain control measures infeasible in the context 
of the FNSB Moderate Plan, the reclassification to Serious obligates 
Alaska to reevaluate potential control measures and strengthen its 
attainment plan control strategy as necessary to meet the more 
stringent Serious area requirements.

III. Final Action

    Under CAA section 110(k), the EPA is approving the FNSB Moderate 
Plan for the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS. Specifically, the EPA 
finds that the FNSB Moderate Plan meets the substantive statutory and 
regulatory requirements for base-year and projected emissions 
inventories, precursor demonstrations, analysis and imposition of RACM/
RACT level emission controls, RFP, QMs, and a demonstration that 
attainment by the December 31, 2015 attainment date was impracticable. 
In addition, the EPA is approving the 2017 motor vehicle emissions 
budgets because they are derived from an approvable RFP demonstration 
and meet the requirements of CAA section 176(c) and 40 CFR part 93, 
subpart A. The EPA is also approving the exceptional events 
demonstrations. Accordingly, the EPA finds that the FNSB Moderate Plan, 
for the FNSB NAA for the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS, meets 
applicable CAA title I, part D requirements for purposes of approval 
under section 110(k) of the CAA.
    The EPA is approving the State Air Quality Control Plan and state 
and local rules that were submitted as part of the FNSB Moderate Plan 
on December 31, 2014; January 29, 2015; March 11, 2016; \13\ and 
November 23, 2016. The EPA is not acting on provisions that Alaska 
withdrew from the SIP submissions.\14\ Specifically, we are approving, 
but not incorporating by reference, the following two sections of the 
State Air Quality Control Plan: Volume II, section III.D.5 and Volume 
III, appendices, section III.D.5. We are incorporating by reference the 
submitted revisions to title 18 of Alaska Administrative Code (AAC), 
chapter 50 (18 AAC 50) sections 007, 010, 025, 065, 075, 076 (except 
(g)(11), 077, 245, 246, and 990. We are approving, but not 
incorporating by reference 18 AAC 50.076(g)(11) because it relates to 
enforcement provisions that if incorporated by reference may conflict 
with the EPA's independent authorities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ We are not acting on the portions of the March 11, 2016 
submission that are unrelated to the FNSB Moderate Plan. We address 
those portions of the March 11, 2016 submission in separate actions.
    \14\ See Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation letter, 
Withdrawal of items from the State Implementation Plan submittal for 
the Fairbanks North Star Borough nonattainment area, July 26, 2017, 
available in the docket for this action
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With respect to local rules, we are incorporating by reference 
Fairbanks North Star Borough Code chapter 21.28 sections 010, 020, 030 
(except J), 050, and 060. We are approving, but not incorporating by 
reference, Fairbanks North Star Borough Code chapter 21.28 section 
030.J because it relates to penalty provisions that if incorporated by 
reference may conflict with the EPA's independent authorities. We are 
also approving, but not incorporating by reference Fairbanks North Star 
Borough Code chapter 21.28 sections 040 and 070 because they relate to 
funding for voluntary initiatives being undertaken by the Borough to 
reduce emissions of PM2.5.

IV. Incorporation by Reference

    In this rule, the EPA is finalizing regulatory text that includes 
incorporation by reference. In accordance with requirements of 1 CFR 
51.5, the EPA is finalizing the incorporation by reference of state and 
local regulations for solid-fuel heaters and open burning, as set forth 
in the amendments to 40 CFR part 52. The EPA has made, and will 
continue to make, these materials generally available through http://www.regulations.gov and/or at the EPA Region 10 Office (please contact 
the person identified in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of 
this preamble for more information).
    Therefore, these materials have been approved by the EPA for 
inclusion in the State implementation plan, have been incorporated by 
reference by the EPA into that plan, are fully federally-enforceable 
under sections 110 and 113 of the CAA as of the effective date of the 
final rulemaking of the EPA's approval, and will be incorporated by 
reference by the Director of the Federal Register in the next update to 
the SIP compilation.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ 62 FR 27968, May 22, 1997.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

    Under the CAA, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP 
submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and applicable 
federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in 
reviewing SIP submissions, the EPA's role is to approve state choices, 
provided that they meet the criteria of the CAA. Accordingly, this 
action merely approves state law as meeting federal requirements and 
does not impose additional requirements beyond

[[Page 42471]]

those imposed by state law. For that reason, this action:
     Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to 
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Orders 
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 
2011);
     does not impose an information collection burden under the 
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
     is certified as not having a significant economic impact 
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
     does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or 
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded 
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
     does not have Federalism implications as specified in 
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
     is not an economically significant regulatory action based 
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 
19885, April 23, 1997);
     is not a significant regulatory action subject to 
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
     is not subject to requirements of Section 12(d) of the 
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent 
with the Clean Air Act; and
     does not provide the EPA with the discretionary authority 
to address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or 
environmental effects, using practicable and legally permissible 
methods, under Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
    The SIP is not approved to apply on any Indian reservation land or 
in any other area where the EPA or an Indian tribe has demonstrated 
that a tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian country, the 
rule does not have tribal implications and it will not impose 
substantial direct costs on tribal governments or preempt tribal law as 
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
    The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the 
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, generally 
provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency promulgating 
the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy of the rule, 
to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller General of the 
United States. The EPA will submit a report containing this action and 
other required information to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of 
Representatives, and the Comptroller General of the United States prior 
to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. A major rule cannot 
take effect until 60 days after it is published in the Federal 
Register. This action is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C. 
804(2).
    Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean Air Act, petitions for 
judicial review of this action must be filed in the United States Court 
of Appeals for the appropriate circuit by November 7, 2017. Filing a 
petition for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule 
does not affect the finality of this action for the purposes of 
judicial review nor does it extend the time within which a petition for 
judicial review may be filed, and shall not postpone the effectiveness 
of such rule or action. This action may not be challenged later in 
proceedings to enforce its requirements. (See section 307(b)(2)).

List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52

    Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Incorporation by 
reference, Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate 
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur oxides, 
Volatile organic compounds.

    Authority:  42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.

    Dated: August 21, 2017.
Michelle L. Pirzadeh,
Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region 10.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, 40 CFR part 52 is 
amended as follows:

PART 52--APPROVAL AND PROMULGATION OF IMPLEMENTATION PLANS

0
1. The authority citation for part 52 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.

Subpart C--Alaska

0
2. In Sec.  52.70:
0
a. The table in paragraph (c) is amended by:
0
i. Adding the entry ``18 AAC 50.007'', in numerical order;
0
ii. Revising the entries ``18 AAC 50.010'', ``18 AAC 50.025'', ``18 AAC 
50.065'', and ``18 AAC 50.075'';
0
iii. Adding the entries ``18 AAC 50.076'' and ``18 AAC 50.077'', in 
numerical order;
0
iv. Revising the entry ``18 AAC 50.245'';
0
v. Adding the entry ``18 AAC 50.246'', in numerical order;
0
vi. Revising the entry ``18 AAC 50.990''; and
0
vii. Adding at the end of the table the heading ``Fairbanks North Star 
Borough Code Chapter 21.28 PM2.5 Air Quality Control 
Program'' and entries for ``21.28.010'', ``21.28.020'', ``21.28.030'', 
``21.28.050'', and ``21.28.060'', in numerical order; and
0
b. The table in paragraph (e) is amended by:
0
i. Adding at the end of the table the heading ``Regulations Approved 
but not Incorporated by Reference'' and entries for ``18 AAC 
50.076(g)(11)'', ``21.28.030.J'', ``21.28.040'', and ``21.28.070''; and
0
ii. Adding at the end of the table an undesignated heading entitled 
``Recently-Approved Plans'' and entries for ``Volume II. Section 
III.D.5.'' and ``Volume III. Appendices Section III.D.5.''.
    The additions and revisions read as follows:


Sec.  52.70   Identification of plan.

* * * * *
    (c) * * *

                                  EPA-Approved Alaska Regulations and Statutes
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 State effective
     State citation          Title/subject             date          EPA approval date         Explanations
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                        Alaska Administrative Code, Title 18--Environmental Conservation
                                   Chapter 50--Air Quality Control (18 AAC 50)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
18 AAC 50.007...........  Local Government     2/28/15............  9/8/17, [Insert
                           Powers or                                 Federal Register
                           Obligations Under                         citation].
                           a Local Air
                           Quality Control
                           Program.
18 AAC 50.010...........  Ambient Air Quality  3/2/16.............  9/8/17, [Insert      except (7) and (8).
                           Standards.                                Federal Register
                                                                     citation].

[[Page 42472]]

 
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
18 AAC 50.025...........  Visibility and       11/26/16...........  9/8/17, [Insert
                           Other Special                             Federal Register
                           Protection Areas.                         citation].
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
18 AAC 50.065...........  Open Burning.......  3/2/16.............  9/8/17, [Insert
                                                                     Federal Register
                                                                     citation].
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
18 AAC 50.075...........  Solid Fuel-fired     11/26/16...........  9/8/17, [Insert
                           Heating Device                            Federal Register
                           Visible Emission                          citation].
                           Standards.
18 AAC 50.076...........  Solid Fuel-fired     11/26/16...........  9/8/17, [Insert      except (g)(11).
                           Heating Device                            Federal Register
                           Fuel Requirements;                        citation].
                           Registration of
                           Commercial Wood
                           Sellers.
18 AAC 50.077...........  Standards for Wood-  11/26/16...........  9/8/17, [Insert
                           fired Heating                             Federal Register
                           Devices.                                  citation].
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
18 AAC 50.245...........  Air Quality          2/28/15............  9/8/17, [Insert
                           Episodes and                              Federal Register
                           Advisories for Air                        citation].
                           Pollutants Other
                           Than PM-2.5.
18 AAC 50.246...........  Air Quality          2/28/15............  9/8/17, [Insert
                           Episodes and                              Federal Register
                           Advisories for PM-                        citation].
                           2.5.
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
18 AAC 50.990...........  Definitions........  3/2/16.............  9/8/17, [Insert
                                                                     Federal Register
                                                                     citation].
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        Fairbanks North Star Borough Code
                                Chapter 21.28--PM2.5 Air Quality Control Program
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
21.28.010...............  Definitions........  3/2/15 (borough      9/8/17, [Insert
                                                effective date).     Federal Register
                                                                     citation].
21.28.020...............  Borough listed       1/15/16 (borough     9/8/17, [Insert
                           appliances.          effective date).     Federal Register
                                                                     citation].
21.28.030...............  Prohibited acts....  10/1/16 (borough     9/8/17, [Insert      except J.
                                                effective date).     Federal Register
                                                                     citation].
21.28.050...............  Forecasting          6/26/15 (borough     9/8/17, [Insert
                           exceedances and      effective date).     Federal Register
                           restrictions in                           citation].
                           the air quality
                           control zone
                           during an alert.
21.28.060...............  No other adequate    8/12/16 (borough     9/8/17, [Insert      .......................
                           source of heat       effective date).     Federal Register
                           determination.                            citation].
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* * * * *
    (e) * * *

                   EPA-Approved Alaska Nonregulatory Provisions and Quasi-Regulatory Measures
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     Applicable
     Name of SIP provision         geographic or       State submittal     EPA approval date       Comments
                                 nonattainment area          date
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                                  * * * * * * *
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             Regulations Approved but not Incorporated by Reference
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
18 AAC 50.076(g)(11)..........  Solid Fuel-fired     11/26/16...........  9/8/17, [Insert
                                 Heating Device                            Federal Register
                                 Fuel Requirements;                        citation].
                                 Registration of
                                 Commercial Wood
                                 Sellers.
21.28.030.J...................  Prohibited Acts.     10/1/16 (borough     9/8/17, [Insert     Fairbanks North
                                 Penalties.           effective date).     Federal Register    Star Borough Code
                                                                           citation].          Chapter 21.28
                                                                                               PM2.5 Air Quality
                                                                                               Control Program.
21.28.040.....................  Enhanced voluntary   1/15/16 (borough     9/8/17, [Insert     Fairbanks North
                                 removal,             effective date).     Federal Register    Star Borough Code
                                 replacement and                           citation].          Chapter 21.28
                                 repair program.                                               PM2.5 Air Quality
                                                                                               Control Program.
21.28.070.....................  Voluntary burn       4/24/15 (borough     9/8/17, [Insert     Fairbanks North
                                 cessation program.   effective date).     Federal Register    Star Borough Code
                                                                           citation].          Chapter 21.28
                                                                                               PM2.5 Air Quality
                                                                                               Control Program.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Recently-Approved Plans
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Volume II. Section III.D.5....  Fairbanks North      11/23/16...........  9/8/17, [Insert     Fairbanks North
                                 Star Borough.                             Federal Register    Star Borough
                                                                           citation].          PM2.5 Moderate
                                                                                               Area Plan.
Volume III. Appendices Section  Fairbanks North      11/23/16...........  9/8/17, [Insert     Only with respect
 III.D.5.                        Star Borough.                             Federal Register    to the Fairbanks
                                                                           citation].          North Star
                                                                                               Borough PM2.5
                                                                                               Moderate Area
                                                                                               Plan.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[[Page 42473]]

[FR Doc. 2017-18768 Filed 9-7-17; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                      42457

                                                 • Does not contain any unfunded                      governments or preempt tribal law as                      enforce its requirements. (See section
                                              mandate or significantly or uniquely                    specified by Executive Order 13175 (65                    307(b)(2)).
                                              affect small governments, described in                  FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
                                                                                                         The Congressional Review Act, 5                        List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
                                              the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
                                              1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);                                   U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small                   Environmental protection, Air
                                                 • Does not have Federalism                           Business Regulatory Enforcement                           pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
                                              implications as specified in Executive                  Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides                  Incorporation by reference,
                                              Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,                    that before a rule may take effect, the                   Intergovernmental relations, Reporting
                                              1999);                                                  agency promulgating the rule must                         and recordkeeping requirements.
                                                 • Is not an economically significant                 submit a rule report, which includes a
                                                                                                                                                                  Dated: August 29, 2017.
                                              regulatory action based on health or                    copy of the rule, to each House of the
                                                                                                      Congress and to the Comptroller General                   Samuel Coleman,
                                              safety risks subject to Executive Order
                                              13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);                    of the United States. EPA will submit a                   Acting Regional Administrator, Region 6.
                                                 • Is not a significant regulatory action             report containing this action and other                       40 CFR part 52 is amended as follows:
                                              subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR                 required information to the U.S. Senate,
                                              28355, May 22, 2001);                                   the U.S. House of Representatives, and                    PART 52—APPROVAL AND
                                                 • Is not subject to requirements of                  the Comptroller General of the United                     PROMULGATION OF
                                              section 12(d) of the National                           States prior to publication of the rule in                IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
                                              Technology Transfer and Advancement                     the Federal Register. A major rule
                                              Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because                cannot take effect until 60 days after it                 ■ 1. The authority citation for part 52
                                              application of those requirements would                 is published in the Federal Register.                     continues to read as follows:
                                              be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;                 This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as                        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
                                              and                                                     defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
                                                 • Does not provide EPA with the                         Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean                   Subpart SS—Texas
                                              discretionary authority to address, as                  Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
                                              appropriate, disproportionate human                     this action must be filed in the United                   ■ 2. In § 52.2270 (e), the second table
                                              health or environmental effects, using                  States Court of Appeals for the                           entitled ‘‘EPA Approved Nonregulatory
                                              practicable and legally permissible                     appropriate circuit by November 7,                        Provisions and Quasi-Regulatory
                                              methods, under Executive Order 12898                    2017. Filing a petition for                               Measures in the Texas SIP’’ is amended
                                              (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).                        reconsideration by the Administrator of                   by adding a new entry at the end of the
                                                 In addition, the SIP is not approved                 this final rule does not affect the finality              table for ‘‘Second 10-year Carbon
                                              to apply on any Indian reservation land                 of this action for the purposes of judicial               Monoxide maintenance plan (limited
                                              or in any other area where EPA or an                    review nor does it extend the time                        maintenance plan) for the El Paso CO
                                              Indian tribe has demonstrated that a                    within which a petition for judicial                      area’’ to read as follows:
                                              tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of               review may be filed, and shall not
                                              Indian country, the rule does not have                  postpone the effectiveness of such rule                   § 52.2270    Identification of plan.
                                              tribal implications and will not impose                 or action. This action may not be                         *       *    *      *     *
                                              substantial direct costs on tribal                      challenged later in proceedings to                            (e) * * *
                                                          EPA APPROVED NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS AND QUASI-REGULATORY MEASURES IN THE TEXAS SIP
                                                                                                                          Applicable               State
                                                                                                                        geographic or
                                                                    Name of SIP provision                                                        submittal/             EPA approval date              Comments
                                                                                                                        nonattainment          effective date
                                                                                                                            area


                                                      *                    *               *                                   *                         *                      *                       *
                                              Second 10-year Carbon Monoxide maintenance plan (limited                  El Paso, TX ....           9/21/2016    9/8/2017, [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                maintenance plan) for the El Paso CO area.                                                                        ister citation].



                                              *      *     *       *      *                           ACTION:   Final rule.                                     clarifying information to supplement
                                              [FR Doc. 2017–18950 Filed 9–7–17; 8:45 am]                                                                        the attainment plan in January 2015,
                                              BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
                                                                                                      SUMMARY:   The Environmental Protection                   March 2015, July 2015, November 2015,
                                                                                                      Agency (EPA) is approving state                           March 2016, November 2016, and
                                                                                                      implementation plan (SIP) revisions                       January 2017 (hereafter, the initial
                                              ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION                                submitted by the State of Alaska (Alaska                  submission and all supplemental and
                                              AGENCY                                                  or the State) to address Clean Air Act                    clarifying information will be
                                                                                                      (CAA or Act) requirements for the 2006                    collectively referred to as ‘‘the FNSB
                                              40 CFR Part 52                                          24-hour fine particulate matter (PM2.5)                   Moderate Plan’’).
                                                                                                      national ambient air quality standards
                                              [EPA–R10–OAR–2015–0131: FRL–9967–21–                    (NAAQS) in the Fairbanks North Star                       DATES: This action is effective on
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                                              Region 10]                                              Borough Moderate PM2.5 nonattainment                      October 10, 2017.
                                              Air Plan Approval; AK, Fairbanks North                  area (FNSB NAA). Alaska submitted an                      ADDRESSES: The EPA has established a
                                              Star Borough; 2006 PM2.5 Moderate                       attainment plan for the FNSB NAA on                       docket for this action under Docket ID
                                              Area Plan                                               December 31, 2014, to meet applicable                     No. EPA–R10–OAR–2015–0131. All
                                                                                                      requirements for an area classified as                    documents in the docket are listed on
                                              AGENCY: Environmental Protection                        ‘‘Moderate’’ nonattainment, and made                      the https://www.regulations.gov Web
                                              Agency (EPA).                                           additional submissions and provided                       site. Although listed in the index, some


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                                              42458             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                              information is not publicly available,                    action fully approving the FNSB                      feasible controls was impermissibly
                                              e.g., CBI or other information whose                      Moderate Plan. For a description of                  narrow’’ and provided as examples
                                              disclosure is restricted by statute.                      Alaska’s submissions, and our                        limiting the hours of operation for
                                              Certain other material, such as                           evaluation and rationale for the                     wood-heating facilities, and wood
                                              copyrighted material, is not placed on                    proposed action, please see the                      gasification and carbon capture and
                                              the Internet and will be publicly                         proposed rulemaking in the Federal                   storage that Alaska did not evaluate or
                                              available only in hard copy form.                         Register at 82 FR 9035, February 2,                  impose as part of the FNSB Moderate
                                              Publicly available docket materials are                   2017.                                                Plan.
                                              available through https://                                                                                        Response 1: The EPA disagrees with
                                                                                                        II. Public Comments and the EPA’s
                                              www.regulations.gov, or please contact                                                                         these comments because Alaska
                                                                                                        Responses
                                              the person identified in the FOR FURTHER                                                                       adequately evaluated appropriate
                                              INFORMATION CONTACT section for                              The EPA provided a 30-day period for              measures for the FNSB NAA for
                                              additional availability information.                      the public to comment on our proposed                purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan.
                                              FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                        action on the FNSB Moderate Plan                     Section 107(a) of the CAA provides
                                              Claudia Vaupel at 206–553–6121, or                        which ended on March 3, 2017. During                 states with both authority and primary
                                              vaupel.claudia@epa.gov.                                   this comment period, we received five                responsibility for developing SIPs that
                                                                                                        public comment letters. The public                   meet applicable statutory and regulatory
                                              SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                                                                        comments can be found in the docket                  requirements for attaining, maintaining,
                                              Throughout this document, wherever                        for this action. Two commenters were
                                              ‘‘we’’, ‘‘us’’ or ‘‘our’’ are used, it is                                                                      and enforcing the NAAQS. States have
                                                                                                        supportive of efforts to improve air                 discretion in formulating their
                                              intended to refer to the EPA.                             quality in general. One commenter                    attainment plans so long as they meet
                                              Table of Contents                                         expressed appreciation for the ‘‘strong              the applicable requirements of the Act.2
                                                                                                        standards implemented in 2006 that                   Additionally, the EPA has explained
                                              I. Background
                                              II. Public Comments and the EPA’s
                                                                                                        strengthened the 24-hour PM2.5                       that the control measure evaluation
                                                    Responses                                           NAAQS.’’ The other commenter stated                  process ‘‘generally allows states to apply
                                                 A. Comments on Control Measures                        that ‘‘Alaska has certainly done their               reasoned judgment as they identify
                                                 B. Comments on Enforcement                             research and taken seriously their                   potential control measures for sources of
                                                 C. Comments on Rules                                   drafting of the proposed plan.’’ Three               direct PM2.5 and PM2.5 precursors in
                                                 D. Other Comments                                      commenters opposed the EPA’s                         their respective nonattainment areas.’’
                                              III. Final Action                                         proposed approval action. In general,
                                              IV. Incorporation by Reference
                                                                                                                                                             81 FR 58037, August 24, 2016. For the
                                                                                                        these adverse comments questioned the                reasons provided in our proposed rule
                                              V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews                  approvability of Alaska’s RACM/RACT                  and further in the following paragraphs,
                                              I. Background                                             analysis, Alaska’s authority to enforce              we conclude that the FNSB Moderate
                                                                                                        the requirements of the attainment plan,             Plan provides for the implementation of
                                                 On February 2, 2017, the EPA                           the stringency of the submitted
                                              published its proposal to approve the                                                                          all RACM/RACT that could reasonably
                                                                                                        regulations compared to existing state               be implemented in the FNSB NAA as
                                              FNSB Moderate Plan submitted by                           regulations, and expressed concerns
                                              Alaska to address CAA requirements for                                                                         required by CAA sections 172(c) and
                                                                                                        about the high PM2.5 concentrations in
                                              the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS in the                                                                            189(a)(1)(C). We respond in the
                                                                                                        the area and the resulting impacts on
                                              FNSB NAA. 82 FR 9035. Specifically,                                                                            following paragraphs to the specific
                                                                                                        public health. We summarize the
                                              we proposed to find that the FNSB                                                                              comments pertaining to the six potential
                                                                                                        adverse comments and provide our
                                              Moderate Plan meets the substantive                                                                            control measures highlighted by the
                                                                                                        responses in the following paragraphs.
                                              statutory and regulatory requirements                                                                          commenters.
                                              for base-year and projected emissions                     A. Comments on Control Measures                         Response 1.a. Low-sulfur heating fuel
                                              inventories, precursor demonstrations,                       Comment 1: Two commenters                         requirement as opposed to economic
                                              analysis and imposition of reasonably                     opposed the EPA’s proposed approval of               incentives. One commenter asserted that
                                              available control measures/technologies                   the FNSB Moderate Plan on the basis                  Alaska failed to evaluate, as part of the
                                              (RACM/RACT), reasonable further                           that it did not consider all potential               analysis for potential RACM/RACT
                                              progress (RFP), quantitative milestones                   measures that Alaska could have                      control measures for residential wood
                                              (QMs) and a demonstration that                            imposed to meet the RACM/RACT                        combustion, a requirement for the use of
                                              attainment by the December 31, 2015                       requirement for a Moderate area                      low sulfur fuel ‘‘as opposed to merely
                                              attainment date was impracticable. We                     attainment plan. One commenter stated                providing incentives for its use.’’ The
                                              also proposed to approve the 2017                         that ‘‘there are many available control              EPA reevaluated Alaska’s analysis on
                                              motor vehicle emissions budgets, state                    measures for residential wood                        low sulfur residential fuel oil in light of
                                              and local rules that were included in the                 combustion that the State has neglected              the comment. Alaska assessed the
                                              FNSB Moderate Plan, and exceptional                       to consider’’ and provided as examples               technological and economic feasibility
                                              event demonstrations submitted by                         requirements for low-sulfur heating fuel,            of switching from the current residential
                                              Alaska to address unrepresentative                        control measures based on housing                    heating oil used in the area to a low-
                                              monitoring data that occurred during                      density, programs to improve wood-                   sulfur fuel (FNSB Moderate Plan
                                              certain events. On July 26, 2017, Alaska                  burning device operation and                         appendix III.D.5.7–41 and 5.7–57).
                                              withdrew from the EPA’s consideration                     maintenance, and training and                        Specifically, Alaska determined that the
                                              four provisions from its SIP                              certification programs for installers of             incremental cost of users switching to
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                                              submissions.1 The removal of these                        wood stoves. The commenter then                      low sulfur fuel oil was not economically
                                              provisions does not affect this final                     asserted that the ‘‘State was required to            feasible for purposes of the FNSB
                                                                                                        analyze these control measures to                    Moderate Plan.
                                                1 See Alaska Department of Environmental
                                                                                                        determine whether they are reasonable
                                              Conservation letter, Withdrawal of items from the                                                                2 CAA section 110(k)(3), 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(3) and

                                              State Implementation Plan submittal for the
                                                                                                        for Fairbanks.’’ The other commenter                 40 CFR 52.02(a); see also Union Elec. Co. v. EPA,
                                              Fairbanks North Star Borough nonattainment area,          stated that ‘‘Alaska’s consideration of              427 U.S. 246, 250 (1976); Train v. Natural Res. Def.
                                              July 26, 2017, available in the docket for this action.   technologically and economically                     Council, 421 U.S. 60, 79 (1975).



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                42459

                                                 The EPA notes that the commenter                     RACT in the FNSB Moderate Plan                        discussed in our proposal, Alaska
                                              may have believed that Alaska did not                   because it did not specifically evaluate              evaluated and implemented public
                                              adequately evaluate the use of low                      a housing density-based control                       awareness and education programs on
                                              sulfur fuel because Alaska did not                      measure, like the one in SJV Rule 4901,               wood storage and heating device
                                              separately consider both mandatory                      for purposes of the FNSB Moderate                     operation and maintenance. 82 FR 9044,
                                              requirements to use such fuel and                       Plan. In its January 6, 2017 clarification            February 2, 2017. We refer the
                                              incentive programs to encourage the                     document (2017 Clarification), Alaska                 commenter to the Alaska Department of
                                              voluntary use of such fuel. Upon                        evaluated a general prohibition on new                Environmental Conservation’s wood
                                              reviewing Alaska’s analysis, however,                   wood-heating device installations in the              heating media Web page (http://
                                              we believe that the economic feasibility                FNSB NAA and determined that it was                   dec.alaska.gov/air/anpms/pm/
                                              analysis for this control measure applies               not feasible because in extreme cold                  wshome.htm) and the Fairbanks North
                                              to both a mandatory requirement, as                     temperatures alternative sources of heat              Star Borough local government’s
                                              well as to incentives to use low-sulfur                 that do not rely on electricity and are               (Borough) air quality Web site (http://
                                              fuel. We note that while the subheading                 not at risk of damage from freezing are               www.aqfairbanks.com) that contain
                                              in the economic incentives section                      a critical source of heating and must be              brochures, television public service
                                              refers to ‘‘incentives,’’ the analysis is not           an available option to the public. See                announcements, and videos about
                                              limited to only providing incentives and                2017 Clarification, pp. 2 and 5. We note              efficient wood-burning device operation
                                              more broadly analyzes the costs of low-                 that the effect of limiting new wood-                 and maintenance. The Borough’s Web
                                              sulfur fuel, whether implemented                        heating device installations based on                 site also has an air quality pledge that
                                              through a requirement or with                           housing density functionally results in               residents can make that includes
                                              incentives. The EPA acknowledges that                   prohibiting their installation for some               efficient wood-heating device operation
                                              the ‘‘incentives’’ subheading is                        homes. The rationale provided by                      and maintenance. If there are additional
                                              somewhat confusing given the broader                    Alaska for the infeasibility of a general             means to improve the operation and
                                              analysis that follows it, but we do not                 prohibition on wood-heating device                    maintenance of wood stoves, we
                                              agree that Alaska failed to consider                    installations would also apply to                     anticipate that Alaska will evaluate
                                              requirements to use low-sulfur fuel                     prohibiting wood-heating device                       them during the development of the
                                              adequately for purposes of the FNSB                     installations based on housing density.               Serious area plan for the FNSB NAA.
                                              Moderate Plan.                                          Thus, the EPA believes that it was not                   Response 1.d. Installer training and
                                                 Alaska concluded that switching to                   necessary for Alaska also to consider a               certification programs for wood stove
                                              low sulfur fuels would not be                           housing density criterion (e.g., number               installers. One commenter stated that
                                              economically feasible; this conclusion                  of dwellings per acre) in evaluating a                the EPA should not approve the FNSB
                                              would apply to both incentive-based                     potential prohibition on new wood                     Moderate Plan because Alaska did not
                                              and mandatory measures. We note that                    heating-device installations because it               consider implementing a training and
                                              the FNSB NAA has been reclassified                      would not change the conclusion that                  certification program for residential
                                              from Moderate to Serious, and Alaska                    prohibiting new wood-heating device                   wood combustion (RWC) device
                                              will be required to prepare and submit                  installations is not feasible in the FNSB             installers that was described in a 1989
                                              for EPA review a Serious area                           NAA.                                                  EPA guidance document (1989 RWC
                                              attainment plan. 82 FR 21711, May 10,                      In addition, we note that for a specific           Guidance).3 The 1989 RWC Guidance
                                              2017. We anticipate that Alaska will                    category of wood-heating devices,                     describes a state or local installer
                                              thoroughly evaluate such control                        hydronic heaters, Alaska evaluated and                certification program that would offer a
                                              measures again, with updated economic                   implemented a setback requirement that                course in proper RWC device
                                              data and in light of the longer Serious                 prohibits new installations that are less             installation and design as a means of
                                              area attainment deadline, in developing                 than 330 feet from the property line.                 minimizing emissions from wood
                                              the Serious area attainment plan for this               One purpose of this requirement is to                 stoves.4 1989 RWC Guidance, p. 3–11.
                                              area which requires analysis and                        restrict these sources, which typically               The EPA acknowledges that the 1989
                                              implementation of Best Available                        emit larger amounts of pollutants, to                 RWC Guidance document remains in
                                              Control Measures/Technologies (BACM/                    less densely populated areas. In the                  effect. However, since the publication of
                                              BACT).                                                  2017 Clarification, Alaska describes the              the 1989 RWC Guidance, national
                                                 Response 1.b. Control measures based                 effect of this control measure as limiting            installer training and certification
                                              on housing density. One commenter                       ‘‘the installation of hydronic heaters to             programs, such as the National
                                              asserted that Alaska failed to consider                 large lots which are unlikely to exist in             Fireplace Institute (NFI) and the
                                              restrictions on the use of certain                      more densely populated areas.’’ 2017                  Chimney Safety Institute of America
                                              residential heating devices based on                    Clarification, p. 7. The hydronic heater              (CSIA), have come into existence. The
                                              population density, i.e., restricting the               setback requirement is thus a density-                EPA has confirmed that these national
                                              use of such devices in more densely                     based requirement that is tailored to                 certifications are available to installers
                                              populated areas. The commenter                          address a specific type of heating                    in the FNSB NAA and that there are
                                              referenced San Joaquin Valley Air                       device.                                               currently seven certified installers in the
                                              District Rule 4901 (SJV Rule 4901) as an                   Response 1.c. Programs to improve                  area. See ‘‘NFI CSIA FNSB Certification
                                              example of a housing density-based                      wood-burning device operation and
                                              control measure that Alaska did not                     maintenance. One commenter asserted                      3 Guidance Document for Residential Wood

                                              consider. SJV Rule 4901 limits or                       that Alaska neglected to consider                     Combustion Emission Control Measures. EPA–450/
                                                                                                                                                            2–89–015. September 1989. Available at https://
                                              prohibits new installations of heating                  programs to improve operation and
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                                                                                                                                                            www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/documents/
                                              devices based on the number of                          maintenance of wood-burning stoves                    epa-450-2-89-015.pdf.
                                              dwellings per acre. Although we agree                   and fireplaces as a means of reducing                    4 The 1989 RWC Guidance explains that, other

                                              that such control measures can be                       emissions from residential wood                       than the New Source Performance Standards, the
                                              appropriate based on the facts and                      combustion. We disagree that Alaska                   measures discussed in the document are not
                                                                                                                                                            ‘‘national measures.’’ 1989 RWC Guidance, p. 1–1.
                                              circumstances of a given area, we                       did not adequately evaluate and adopt                 We therefore, interpret the installer certification
                                              disagree with the commenter’s assertion                 programs to improve the use of                        program described in the 1989 RWC Guidance to be
                                              that Alaska did not consider all RACM/                  residential wood heating devices. As we               a state or local program.



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                                              42460            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                              List’’ in the docket for this action. We                the FNSB Moderate Plan identified                        Response 2.a. Ban on green wood
                                              believe that the guidance                               wood heating as a primary source of                   sales. Alaska rejected banning green
                                              recommendation for states to consider a                 PM2.5 in the area, major stationary                   wood sales (i.e., wood that has a
                                              state or local training and certification               wood-heating facilities, for which a site             moisture content greater than 20%)
                                              program for wood stove installers is                    operating plan might be appropriate,                  based on technological infeasibility.
                                              adequately addressed in the FNSB NAA                    were not identified as a source category              However, Alaska adopted other control
                                              by the existence of national certification              in the emissions inventory and therefore              measures that address the moisture
                                              programs.                                               no analysis of control measures was                   content of wood to reduce emissions.
                                                 As discussed in the 1989 RWC                         required. See 40 CFR 51.1009(a)(1).                   First, wood sellers in the FNSB NAA are
                                              Guidance, the effectiveness of an                       Accordingly, we do not believe it was                 required to register with the State and
                                              installer certification program depends                 necessary for Alaska to evaluate and                  they must disclose the moisture content
                                              in part on the extent to which installers               impose this type of measure, given the                of wood they sell to consumers. This
                                              and consumers participate in the                        absence of relevant sources. The EPA                  will serve to assure that users of
                                              programs. 1989 RWC Guidance p. 3–12.                    notes, however, that the FNSB Moderate                purchased wood will be on notice of the
                                              During development of the FNSB                          Plan includes a more broadly applicable               moisture content. Second, burning green
                                              Moderate Plan, Alaska considered and                    mandatory curtailment program that has                wood in wood-fired heaters is
                                              responded to public comments about                      limitations on the operation of wood-                 prohibited in the FNSB NAA. This, in
                                              installation and certification programs                 heating devices when PM2.5 ambient                    conjunction with the requirement on
                                              by explaining that it had added to its                  levels are forecasted to reach high                   sellers to disclose moisture content, will
                                              outreach materials for users of wood                    values. See 82 FR 9043, February 2,                   serve to assure that purchasers will not
                                              stoves the EPA’s recommendation for                     2017.                                                 burn green wood. The EPA considers
                                              consumers to use certified installers.                     Response 1.f. Wood gasification and                the requirement to disclose the moisture
                                              See FNSB Moderate Plan, appendix                        partial carbon capture and storage. One               content of wood for sale in conjunction
                                              III.D.5.13–151. Additionally, although                  commenter suggested that Alaska’s                     with the prohibition on burning wet
                                              not a control measure in the FNSB                       RACM/RACT analysis should have                        wood to be an adequate approach to
                                              Moderate Plan, we note that the EPA                     considered wood gasification and                      reducing emissions from green wood for
                                              has awarded Alaska funding for a                        partial carbon capture and storage as an              purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan. It
                                              changeout program for the FNSB NAA                      energy efficiency measure. The EPA                    is unclear how the commenter’s
                                              that will provide funds to encourage                    disagrees that an analysis of these                   recommended partial implementation of
                                              users to replace old wood and pellet                    technologies is appropriate for a PM2.5               a ban on green wood sales would
                                              appliances and fireplaces with new EPA                  nonattainment area plan. These                        accomplish additional emission
                                              certified appliances or with oil or                     technologies are generally designed to                reductions beyond the approaches
                                              natural gas appliances that will help                   reduce carbon dioxide emissions and                   already adopted by Alaska.
                                              reduce emissions. The EPA grant                         are not considered viable control
                                                                                                      measures for reducing PM2.5.                             Response 2.b. Require all hydronic
                                              providing these funds requires that                                                                           heaters to be certified or have retrofits.
                                              participants in the program have the                       Comment 2: Partial implementation
                                                                                                      was not considered. One commenter                     Alaska concluded that it was not
                                              replacement appliances installed by a                                                                         feasible to require that all existing
                                              certified installer, a contracted hearth                stated that the EPA should not approve
                                                                                                      the FNSB Moderate Plan because Alaska                 hydronic heaters in the FNSB NAA be
                                              retailer, or a contractor under the                                                                           replaced with specified certified models
                                              approval and supervision of a                           failed to consider the feasibility of
                                                                                                      implementing control measures in part,                or to require retrofits for such heaters.
                                              contracted hearth retailer. This program                                                                      However, the FNSB Moderate Plan
                                                                                                      even if it concluded that full
                                              is funded by the EPA’s Targeted Airshed                                                                       includes a Borough code requirement
                                                                                                      implementation of the measures was
                                              Grant and was awarded to Alaska on                                                                            that an owner of an existing uncertified
                                                                                                      infeasible. The commenter suggested
                                              July 18, 2017.5 Finally, we anticipate                                                                        hydronic heater that has had two or
                                                                                                      that the following control measures
                                              that Alaska will further evaluate how to                                                                      more violations of certain Borough code
                                                                                                      ‘‘might be implemented in stages or by
                                              regulate emissions from wood stoves for                                                                       emissions provisions must remove the
                                                                                                      employing a more targeted approach’’ (i)
                                              purposes of meeting the BACM/BACT                                                                             device, unless certain conditions are
                                                                                                      a ban on green wood sales; (ii) a
                                              requirement in the Serious SIP, and this                                                                      met. Additionally, Alaska required that
                                                                                                      requirement that all hydronic heaters be
                                              should include consideration of                                                                               all hydronic heaters installed after
                                                                                                      certified or have retrofits; (iii) a
                                              additional ways to encourage correct                    requirement that uncertified stoves in                February 28, 2015 be qualified under
                                              wood stove installations.                               rental units be replaced; (iv) a                      the EPA’s Phase 2 program or meet
                                                 Response 1.e. Operating limitations                                                                        certain emission standards. We also
                                                                                                      requirement that rental units have
                                              on wood-heating facilities. One                                                                               note that owners of existing hydronic
                                                                                                      alternate sources of heat; and (v) a
                                              commenter stated that Alaska failed to                                                                        heaters are eligible to receive incentives
                                                                                                      requirement that new constructions
                                              consider operating limitations for                                                                            for removal or replacement of the
                                                                                                      have alternate sources of heat.
                                              sources such as requirements in site                       Response 2: We disagree with the                   devices through the Borough’s
                                              plans ‘‘that wood-heating facilities                    claim that the EPA must disapprove the                changeout program. Furthermore, all
                                              operate during limited hours per year.’’                FNSB Moderate Plan because Alaska                     hydronic heaters are subject to a 20
                                              We interpret the commenter’s concern                    failed to assess partial implementation               percent opacity limit, a requirement to
                                              to refer to the type of operating plans                 of the five control measures identified               use dry wood, and must comply with
                                              typical for major stationary sources, in                by the commenter. As discussed in the                 wood heating curtailments. Also,
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                                              which a source might be subject to                      following paragraphs, Alaska either                   hydronic heaters that do not meet
                                              restricted hours of operation as one                    fully or partially implemented the                    certain emission standards must be
                                              means of reducing emissions. Although                   control measures, or adequately                       removed upon conveyance of property.
                                                5 See U.S. EPA Grant Agreement 01J30601 to the
                                                                                                      addressed emissions in other ways that                Through this suite of overlapping
                                              Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation,
                                                                                                      obviated the need to control the                      requirements, we believe that Alaska
                                              August 8, 2017, available in the docket for this        emissions through partial                             has adequately addressed emissions
                                              action.                                                 implementation of the control measures.               from uncertified hydronic heaters for


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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                       42461

                                              purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan.                     heat. As discussed previously, a                      plan. As a result, and as the commenter
                                              The EPA expects that Alaska will                        provision that addresses this control                 notes, there is some information in the
                                              evaluate the need for further controls,                 measure was included in the FNSB                      original submission that is outdated and
                                              such as expanded changeout incentives                   Moderate plan. The provision excludes                 that was made extraneous by the
                                              or retrofits to existing uncertified                    owners of newly constructed buildings                 supplemental submissions. However,
                                              hydronic heaters, as part of the BACM/                  from obtaining a NOASH determination                  the supplemental submissions clearly
                                              BACT analysis for the Serious area                      which functionally requires the                       identify the portions of the original
                                              attainment plan for this area.                          installation of alternate sources of heat             submission that were updated and
                                                 Response 2.c. Replace uncertified                    in new buildings so that the building                 revised and we do not believe that the
                                              stoves in rental units. The FNSB                        occupants can comply with wood                        extraneous material that remains in the
                                              Moderate Plan includes a requirement                    heating curtailments.                                 original submission is a basis for
                                              that uncertified wood-fired heating                        Comment 3: One commenter stated                    disapproving the FNSB Moderate Plan.
                                              devices must be removed when a                          that the technological feasibility                    As explained in response to comments
                                              property is leased. The requirement                     analysis in the FNSB Moderate Plan is                 concerning specific potential control
                                              became effective on June 9, 2017.                       inadequate because Alaska took the                    measures, we have concluded that
                                              Because this control measure has been                   position that it was impeded from                     Alaska’s evaluation of the measures is
                                              fully implemented, consideration of                     implementing certain control measures                 adequate for purposes of the FNSB
                                              partial implementation is unnecessary.                  due to local opposition evidenced by a                Moderate Plan.
                                              We note that the wood heating device                    citizen’s referendum prohibiting                         Comment 4: One commenter argued
                                              emission standards in the FNSB                          regulation of home heating sources, and               that the EPA cannot approve the FNSB
                                              Moderate Plan do not allow the                          that when the referendum was lifted,                  Moderate Plan because Alaska made
                                              installation of uncertified devices.                    Alaska continued to dismiss the control               errors in reasoning. The commenter
                                              Therefore, once an uncertified wood                     measures due to insufficient time to                  provided as an example, Alaska’s
                                              stove has been removed from a rental                    revise the Moderate area attainment                   assessment of a ban on new installations
                                              unit, it cannot be replaced with an                     plan. This commenter also stated that                 of hydronic heaters and the assumption
                                              uncertified device.                                     not enough has been done to render the                that such a ban could have the negative
                                                 Response 2.d. Require rental units to                2014 submission compliant with the                    effect of prolonging the use of older
                                              have alternate sources of heat. In the                  CAA.                                                  devices because new installations
                                              FNSB Moderate Plan, Alaska explained                       Response 3: We acknowledge that                    would be prohibited. The other example
                                              that surveys from 2011–2015 indicated                   Alaska’s initial December 2014                        the commenter provided was Alaska’s
                                              that only 5.6% of households surveyed                   submission cited a citizen’s referendum               assumption that the benefits would be
                                              had wood as a sole source of heat. See                  as a basis for not adopting many                      small for a requirement that rental units
                                              2017 Clarification, p. 12. This number                  potential control measures. As we                     in the FNSB NAA have alternative
                                              included both rental and owner                          explained in our proposal, the EPA does               heating sources.
                                              occupied homes, so presumably the                       not view social acceptability, including                 Response 4: We do not agree that the
                                              number of rental units without                          the citizen’s referendum prohibiting                  specific Alaska assumptions the
                                              alternative sources of heat would be                    regulation of home heating sources in                 commenter referenced are
                                              smaller. We note, however, that the                     any manner, to be an appropriate basis                inappropriate, given the facts and
                                              FNSB Moderate plan does not allow                       for rejecting required emission control               circumstances in the FNSB NAA. In
                                              owners of newly constructed buildings,                  measures. See 82 FR 9045, February 2,                 evaluating a potential ban on new
                                              including rental properties, to obtain a                2017.                                                 installations of hydronic heaters,
                                              ‘‘no other adequate source of heat’’                       Significantly, however, the situation              Alaska’s primary explanation for why
                                              (NOASH) determination. A NOASH                          about which the commenter was                         such a control was not appropriate was
                                              determination allows a person to use a                  concerned has changed because the                     that ‘‘due to arctic conditions,
                                              solid fuel or waste oil burning appliance               referendum no longer applies and                      alternative sources of heat must be an
                                              during a stage 2 or stage 3 curtailment.                Alaska has evaluated additional control               available option to the public to protect
                                              To qualify for a NOASH determination,                   measures for inclusion in the FNSB                    health, life, and property.’’ 2017
                                              a building owner or manager must file                   Moderate Plan. Alaska provided                        Clarification, p. 2. The assumption
                                              an application with the Borough                         supplemental SIP submissions,                         referenced by the commenter, that
                                              confirming that the building has no                     supported by clarifying information,                  implementing such a ban may
                                              adequate heating source other than a                    that analyzed the control measures that               discourage replacement of older and
                                              solid fuel or waste oil burning                         it previously considered infeasible due               higher emitting hydronic heaters, was
                                              appliance, that economic hardships                      to the citizen’s referendum, including                an additional consideration for not
                                              require the use of a solid fuel waste oil               the control measures identified by the                banning new hydronic heaters
                                              burning appliance, or that complying                    commenter. Based on this revised                      installations. We believe that it was
                                              with a curtailment would result in                      analysis, Alaska adopted some                         reasonable for Alaska to take into
                                              damage to property. Prohibiting newly                   additional control measures, such as the              consideration the potential impacts that
                                              constructed buildings, including rental                 mandatory solid-fuel heating device                   a ban on new hydronic heaters might
                                              properties, from obtaining a NOASH                      curtailment program, but continued to                 have on Alaska and the Borough’s
                                              determination functionally requires the                 find some control measures infeasible                 ongoing efforts to encourage
                                              installation of alternate sources of heat               for reasons unrelated to the expired                  replacement of older and higher
                                              so that the building occupants can                      referendum, such as the ban on green                  emitting devices with newer, cleaner
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                                              comply with wood heating curtailments.                  wood sales.                                           burning devices. Alaska developed the
                                              We anticipate that Alaska will revisit                     Alaska’s supplemental submissions                  FNSB Moderate Plan through an
                                              further controls for rental units in                    provided additional control measures                  extensive public process and adopted a
                                              developing its Serious area attainment                  and an updated and revised analysis for               suite of controls for reducing the
                                              plan.                                                   certain components of the FNSB                        emissions from hydronic heaters that
                                                 Response 2.e. Require new                            Moderate Plan to ensure that the EPA                  are intended to help bring the area into
                                              construction to have alternate sources of               could evaluate and act on the current                 attainment. The decision not to impose


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                                              42462            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                              a ban because it might unintentionally                  referenced by the commenter. See 82 FR                BACT analysis for potential control
                                              undercut other related measures is not                  9045, February 2, 2017.                               measures for the Serious area attainment
                                              unreasonable. We anticipate that Alaska                    Comment 6: One commenter alleged                   plan. 82 FR 21711, May 10, 2017.
                                              will further evaluate this emissions                    that Alaska’s RACT conclusion ‘‘is                    Accordingly, Alaska’s conclusion that
                                              source as part of its development of the                flawed, at least with respect to the                  additional SO2 emissions controls for
                                              Serious area plan for the FNSB NAA.                     control of sulfur dioxide (SO2) at local              these stationary sources were not
                                                 Regarding Alaska’s statement that the                power plants,’’ and that Alaska                       feasible for purposes of meeting RACM/
                                              benefits are assumed to be small for                    ‘‘unjustifiably concluded that the                    RACT requirements must be revisited in
                                              requiring alternate sources of heat in                  current level of controls meets RACT.’’               the context of the more stringent BACM/
                                              rental units, we believe that Alaska                    The commenter referred to dispersion                  BACT analysis for the Serious area
                                              made reasonable assumptions based on                    modeling and the speciation analysis in               attainment plan.
                                              the latest information available at the                 the FNSB Moderate Plan to show that
                                              time. For example, Alaska explained                     SO2 precursor emissions from major                       Comment 7: We received two
                                              that surveys from 2011–2015 indicated                   stationary sources contribute to                      comments that expressed concern
                                              that only 5.6% of households surveyed                   exceedances of the 2006 24-hour PM2.5                 regarding the availability of natural gas
                                              had wood as a sole source of heat. See                  NAAQS.                                                as an alternative fuel in the FNSB NAA.
                                              2017 Clarification, p. 12. This number                     Response 6: The EPA agrees that SO2                One commenter stated that Alaska has
                                              included both rental and owner-                         emissions from major stationary sources               failed to supply the area with natural
                                              occupied homes, so presumably the                       contribute to the PM2.5 concentrations in             gas, that the infrastructure is not in
                                              number of rental units without                          the FNSB NAA, as does Alaska. We did                  place, and that the area is years away
                                              alternative sources of heat would be                    not propose to approve, nor did Alaska                from having natural gas. Another
                                              smaller. We anticipate that Alaska will                 provide, a demonstration that SO2                     commenter identified language in the
                                              revisit the analysis of rental units with               emissions from stationary sources were                FNSB Moderate Plan in which Alaska
                                              updated information in developing its                   insignificant in the formation of ambient             discussed the possibility of a public-
                                              Serious area attainment plan.                           PM2.5 concentrations in the FNSB NAA.                 private partnership for bringing
                                                 Comment 5: One commenter argued                      Accordingly, SO2 is a precursor that                  additional natural gas to the community
                                              that the wood-fuel cost assessment in                   Alaska evaluated for emission controls                that has not yet occurred. This
                                              the FNSB Moderate Plan is incomplete                    in this area for purposes of attaining the            commenter stated that ‘‘to the extent the
                                              because it does not accurately reflect the              2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.                             SIP relies upon these references, it
                                              full cost of burning wood as a fuel, such                  As explained in our proposed                       cannot be approved.’’
                                              as the value of a homeowner’s time and                  approval of the FNSB Moderate Plan
                                              the cost of ash disposal, and the fact that             with respect to this issue, Alaska                       Response 7: The commenters are
                                              more fuel is needed to heat a building                  conducted a technical and economic                    correct that Alaska has been exploring
                                              in Fairbanks than in the rest of the                    feasibility analysis of RACT-level SO2                the expanded use of natural gas as an
                                              country.                                                controls for major stationary sources in              alternative fuel in the FNSB NAA as a
                                                 Response 5: We agree with the                        the FNSB NAA and concluded that                       potential means of helping to reduce
                                              commenter that an economic feasibility                  additional controls beyond those                      emissions and to attain the 2006 24-
                                              analysis should include a range of costs                already in place were not feasible. 82 FR             hour PM2.5 NAAQS, but thus far natural
                                              associated with potential control                       9044, February 2, 2017. The EPA has                   gas is not widely available in the area.
                                              measures for a given type of emissions                  explained that a state could demonstrate              To provide natural gas at scale,
                                              source. Considerations of economic                      that an existing source in an area should             significant investments of time and
                                              infeasibility are used to exclude control               not be subject to a specific control                  money are needed to construct the
                                              measures during the RACT/RACM                           technology especially where such                      infrastructure to deliver natural gas to
                                              analysis. The EPA notes, however, that                  technology is unreasonable in light of                Fairbanks and to distribute it to
                                              Alaska did not reject any control                       the area’s attainment needs, or where                 consumers. Thus, in the FNSB Moderate
                                              measures based on the costs associated                  such technology is infeasible. In such a              Plan, Alaska described plans to seek to
                                              with use of wood as a fuel. The cost                    case, a state could conclude that no                  expand the availability of natural gas in
                                              assessment referenced by the                            control technology is ‘‘reasonably                    the future. Because natural gas is
                                              commenter provided background                           available,’’ and thus RACT for the                    currently not available at a meaningful
                                              information on mandatory curtailment                    source could be the existing emission                 scale it was not included as part of
                                              programs as a potential control measure.                controls rather than additional controls.             Alaska’s control strategy analysis and
                                              See FNSB Moderate Plan appendix                         See 81 FR 58034, August 24, 2016.                     Alaska did not take credit for emissions
                                              III.D.5.7–16. In the initial FNSB                          Additionally, the commenter did not                reductions related to natural gas in the
                                              Moderate Plan, Alaska considered the                    identify any specific deficiencies with               FNSB Moderate Plan.6 Alaska’s
                                              mandatory curtailment program to be                     respect to Alaska’s RACT analysis for                 discussion of potential expansion of
                                              technologically infeasible. See FNSB                    SO2 emissions from major stationary
                                                                                                                                                            natural gas in the FNSB Moderate Plan
                                              Moderate Plan appendix III.D.5.7–27,                    sources for the EPA to evaluate the
                                                                                                                                                            is not a basis for disapproval of the
                                              32, 39. Alaska did not conduct an                       claim that Alaska’s conclusion is
                                                                                                                                                            FNSB Moderate Plan. Because of the
                                              economic feasibility analysis on any                    unjustified. The EPA finds that Alaska
                                                                                                                                                            potential emission reduction benefits,
                                              wood heating control measure found to                   adequately justified its conclusions that
                                                                                                                                                            the EPA supports efforts by Alaska to
                                              be technologically infeasible. As                       its stationary source control measures
                                              discussed in our proposal, Alaska                       represent the adoption of reasonable
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                                                                                                                                                              6 As we discussed in our proposed rule, Alaska
                                              provided a supplemental submission                      control measures that meet RACM/                      provided a 2019 inventory for informational
                                              supported by clarifying information that                RACT requirements for purposes of the                 purposes. See 82 FR 9037, February 2, 2017.
                                              reevaluated the technological feasibility               Moderate FNSB Plan for the 2006 24-                   Although the 2019 inventory included emissions
                                              of various control measures and adopted                 hour PM2.5 NAAQS. We note that the                    reductions estimated from potential future
                                                                                                                                                            expansion of reliance on natural gas, this
                                              and implemented the mandatory                           FNSB NAA has been reclassified from                   informational inventory was not relied on in the SIP
                                              curtailment program that was the                        Moderate to Serious, and thus Alaska                  nor was it a required element for the FNSB
                                              subject of the earlier cost analysis                    will be required to conduct a BACM/                   Moderate plan.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                        42463

                                              expand the availability of natural gas in               included in the RACM analysis and                     resources to implement regulations and
                                              the FNSB NAA in the future.                             adopted immediately. In other words,                  enforce them.’’
                                                 Comment 8: One commenter objected                    the commenter asserted that Alaska                       Response 10: We agree that states
                                              to the EPA’s statement in the proposal                  could not set aside these control                     must have authority to enforce the
                                              that Fairbanks was relatively new to                    measures to meet the CAA section                      requirements of their SIPs to meet
                                              programs for reducing emissions from                    172(c)(9) requirement for contingency                 various CAA requirements, including
                                              wood heating and, prior to 2015, the                    measures because Alaska was required                  CAA section 110(a)(1), 110(a)(2)(C), and
                                              community had not experienced                           to impose these measures to meet the                  110(a)(2)(E). We disagree with the
                                              mandatory curtailments on solid-fuel                    RACM/RACT requirement instead.                        commenter, however, that Alaska lacks
                                              heating devices. The commenter                                                                                the required enforcement authority.
                                              claimed that this statement was used to                    Response 9: The control measures the               States are required to have a SIP that
                                              justify limitations on the applicability of             EPA proposed to approve as SIP-                       provides for the implementation,
                                              the curtailment requirements for solid                  strengthening measures are: (1) A                     maintenance, and enforcement of the
                                              fuel heating devices in the FNSB                        requirement that uncertified wood-fired               NAAQS. Whenever the EPA
                                              Moderate Plan.                                          heating devices be removed when a                     promulgates a new or revised NAAQS,
                                                 Response 8: We disagree with the                     property is sold, leased, or conveyed,                the CAA requires states to make a SIP
                                              commenter’s characterization of the                     and (2) a mandatory wood seller                       submission, commonly known as an
                                              statement in the proposal as the EPA’s                  registration and wood moisture                        ‘‘infrastructure SIP’’ to establish that
                                              justification for approval of Alaska’s                  disclosure program. See 82 FR 9052,                   they meet a host of requirements
                                              curtailment requirements, including                     February 2, 2017. Specifically, we are                including those pertaining to general
                                              certain limitations on those                            approving 18 AAC 50.076(d)–(i) and 18                 enforcement authority.
                                              requirements. In the sentence preceding                 AAC 50.077(a)(2)(B). These provisions                    In November 2014, the EPA approved
                                              the one cited by the commenter, we                      will become federally enforceable upon                Alaska’s infrastructure SIP for the 2006
                                              provided the reasons for our conclusion                 the effective date of this action.                    24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS. 79 FR 66651,
                                              that the limitations on the applicability               However, we disagree with the                         November 10, 2014. The EPA found that
                                              of the curtailment requirements are                     commenter’s assertion that Alaska did                 the infrastructure SIP addressed the
                                              appropriate: ‘‘The EPA concludes that                   not evaluate these control measures as                basic program elements in accordance
                                              in the FNSB NAA, where wintertime                       potential RACM/RACT measures.                         with CAA section 110(a)(1) and (2),
                                              temperatures can be extreme and there                   Alaska evaluated both of these control                including, but not limited to regulatory
                                              is limited availability of fuel alternatives            measures and they have been                           structure, monitoring, modeling, legal
                                              such as natural gas, the three limitations              implemented. See 2017 Clarification pp.               authority, and adequate resources
                                              in Alaska’s mandatory solid-fuel heating                3–5. The requirement that uncertified                 necessary to implement, maintain, and
                                              device curtailment program similarly                    wood-fired heating devices be removed                 enforce the standards. Relevant to this
                                              invoke public welfare considerations                    when a property is sold, leased, or                   comment, the EPA found that Alaska’s
                                              that are appropriate in the context of a                conveyed became effective on June 9,                  SIP met the CAA section 110(a)(2)(C)
                                              Moderate area plan.’’ See 82 FR 9046,                   2017 and the mandatory wood seller                    requirement to include a program to
                                              February 2, 2017. In short, given the                   registration and wood moisture                        provide for the enforcement of emission
                                              facts and circumstances of this area,                   disclosure program became effective on                limits and other control measures in the
                                              Alaska concluded that it was not                        August 15, 2017.7                                     SIP and also met the CAA section
                                              reasonable to prohibit the use of solid                                                                       110(a)(2)(E) requirement that a state
                                                                                                      B. Comments on Enforcement
                                              fuel heating devices during periods of                                                                        provide necessary assurances that it has
                                              extreme cold weather. Our conclusion                       Comment 10: One commenter                          adequate authority under state law to
                                              regarding the appropriateness of the                    opposed the EPA’s proposed approval of                carry out the SIP. Alaska’s infrastructure
                                              limitations that Alaska included in the                 the FNSB Moderate Plan because of                     SIP submission for the 2006 24-hour
                                              curtailment requirements remains                        concerns that the control measures in                 PM2.5 NAAQS referred to Alaska Statute
                                              unchanged. The reference to the                         the plan are not enforceable. One                     (AS) 46.14.030 State Air Quality Control
                                              newness of the curtailment program                      commenter took issue with Alaska’s                    Plan which provides the Alaska
                                              questioned by the commenter was                         enforcement authority claiming that                   Department of Environmental
                                              merely an EPA acknowledgment that a                     ‘‘outside of seeking voluntary                        Conservation (ADEC) statutory authority
                                              two-stage program could help to                         compliance, the State claims that its                 to act for the State and adopt regulations
                                              facilitate effective implementation of the              only real enforcement mechanism is                    necessary to implement the State Air
                                              program in the community. This                          civil litigation.’’ Another commenter                 Quality Control Plan. It also references
                                              statement is based on the EPA’s                         stated that ‘‘Alaska has made no good                 18 AAC 50.030 State Air Quality
                                              experience in other nonattainment areas                 faith effort to secure ‘enforcement                   Control Plan which provides regulatory
                                              where adoption and implementation of                    authority’ from the Alaska legislature.’’             authority to implement and enforce the
                                              a curtailment program has required                      This commenter also contends that                     SIP. See 79 FR 66651, November 10,
                                              efforts to increase community awareness                 ‘‘[t]he state legislature granted $350                2014 and 79 FR 41502, July 16, 2014.
                                              and comprehension of the curtailment                    Million dollars to privately owned                    Furthermore, ADEC has statutory
                                              program in order to achieve the                         refineries and a shuttered Agrium                     authority to enforce violations of air
                                              anticipated emissions reductions.                       Fertilizer plant, yet claims they lack                quality regulations by seeking the
                                                 Comment 9: One commenter objected                                                                          assessment of civil penalties (AS
                                              to our proposal to approve, as SIP                                                                            46.030.760) and criminal penalties (AS
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                                                                                                        7 See the following Alaska Department of
                                              strengthening, the control measures that                Environmental Conservation documents in the
                                                                                                                                                            46.030.790). The EPA’s analysis of the
                                              Alaska submitted as contingency                         docket for this action: (1) Commercial Wood Seller    adequacy of enforcement authority is
                                              measures in the FNSB Moderate Plan.                     Registration Requirement Fairbanks North Star         premised on whether a state has legal
                                              The commenter explained that Alaska                     Borough PM 2.5 Nonattainment Area Questions and       authority to enforce the SIP. The
                                                                                                      Answers and (2) Wood-Fired Heating Device
                                              did not provide a justification for not                 Requirement—Remove or Replace Non Compliant
                                                                                                                                                            commenter’s concern that ADEC may
                                              implementing these control measures                     Devices Upon Property Sale, Lease or Conveyance—      opt to seek voluntary compliance does
                                              immediately and that they must be                       Effective Date: June 9, 2017.                         not negate the fact that it has the


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                                              42464            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                              necessary enforcement authority to                         Comment 11: One commenter noted                    from this source category even during
                                              require compliance with the SIP. A                      that control measures in SIPs must                    those low temperature events. It is
                                              state’s election to seek voluntary                      apply continuously and ‘‘cannot operate               important to clarify how Alaska is
                                              compliance rather than proceeding to                    as a ‘suite’ of controls that only                    combining control measures in order to
                                              judicial enforcement is an exercise of                  collectively apply continuous controls.’’             assure that the SIP imposes continuous
                                              enforcement discretion. The EPA notes                   The commenter specifically pointed to                 emission limits on solid fuel heating
                                              that a state’s exercise of enforcement                  the ¥15 °Fahrenheit (F) temperature                   devices, even when the curtailment
                                              discretion does not affect the ability of               limitation on the mandatory solid-fuel                requirement is suspended during
                                              the EPA to pursue enforcement under                     heating device curtailment requirement                extreme cold events.
                                              CAA section 113 or others pursuant to                   as an example of ‘‘perhaps a defensible                  Alaska is aware of the public health
                                              the citizen’s suit provision in CAA                     exception for the needs of the                        concerns associated with ambient PM2.5
                                              section 304.                                            community, but one that results in the                caused by the use of solid fuel heating
                                                 We also disagree with the comment                    waiver of controls during peak periods                devices and devised a way to balance
                                              suggesting that ADEC must justify the                   of emissions.’’ The commenter also                    competing concerns about high PM2.5
                                              absence of administrative enforcement                   observed that the EPA and citizens must               concentrations with concerns about the
                                              authorities. The commenter argues that                  have the ability to bring enforcement                 need to provide adequate heat during
                                              AS 46.14.030 generally grants authority                 actions to assure compliance and that                 extreme low temperature events for
                                              to ADEC to adopt regulations to                         state and local control measures that                 purposes of the FNSB Moderate Plan.
                                              implement the SIP which could be read                   shield pollution sources from                         When temperatures are below ¥15 °F,
                                              to include administrative enforcement                   enforcement are not enforceable as                    the Borough continues to issue alerts
                                              authority. As noted previously, ADEC                    required under CAA section                            based on the forecasted concentrations
                                              has authority to pursue civil and                       110(a)(2)(A).                                         of PM2.5. Stage 2 alerts are called when
                                              criminal judicial actions to enforce                       Response 11: First, the EPA disagrees              PM2.5 levels are forecasted to reach 35
                                              violations of the SIP and the EPA has                   with the commenter’s general                          micrograms per cubic meter (mg/m3) or
                                              already determined that ADEC has                        contention that a suite of control                    more. Stage 3 alerts are called when
                                              adequate authority to enforce the SIP,                  measures that operate together to                     PM2.5 levels are forecasted to reach
                                              including the FNSB Moderate Plan. If                    provide for continuous regulation of                  55mg/m3 or more. The temperature
                                              the commenter believes ADEC should                      emissions from a source is inconsistent               limitation on the applicability of stage 3
                                              have additional enforcement authority,                  with CAA requirements. The EPA agrees                 alert requirements was included to
                                              the appropriate venue to pursue such a                  that SIP emission limitations must limit              address the public welfare concerns
                                              concern is with ADEC and the Alaska                     emissions from sources on a continuous                associated with precluding the use of
                                              State Legislature. Furthermore, as noted                basis. However, it may be infeasible for              solid-fuel heating devices during
                                              by the commenter, the Borough has                       a single numerical emission limitation                periods of extreme cold. Alaska
                                              authority to issue warnings and                         or control technology to apply                        explained that ‘‘. . . the temperature
                                              citations to enforce key control                        continuously at all times to some                     threshold is a feature of the episode
                                              measures adopted at the local level,                    sources. In such circumstances, a state               program recognizing the unique
                                              such as the solid-fuel heating device                   may elect to impose alternative                       challenges faced by residents during
                                              curtailment program. The Borough                        emission limitations that apply to                    periods of extreme cold. Residents use
                                              control measures are included in                        specific modes of source operation in                 wood heating as a form of supplemental
                                              Alaska’s FNSB Moderate Plan                             order to assure that emissions from the               heat to maintain livable conditions and
                                              submission and will become a part of                    source are, in fact, continuously                     mitigate economic hardships associated
                                              the federally-approved SIP.                             controlled. The EPA recently restated                 with high heating costs.’’ 2017
                                                 Another commenter contended that                     and updated its policy with respect to                Clarification, p. 18.
                                              Alaska claimed it lacks the resources to                continuous emission limitations in SIP                  To address these competing concerns,
                                              implement and enforce regulations. The                  provisions, noting that emission                      Alaska and the Borough structured the
                                              EPA is unaware of any such statement                    limitations as a whole must be                        stage 3 alert requirements to allow the
                                              attributable to Alaska submitted as part                continuous but that such limitations                  continued use of certain devices during
                                              of the FNSB Moderate Plan, and the                      could be a combination of different                   periods of extreme cold. When
                                              commenter provided no reference or                      numerical limits, control requirements                temperatures are below ¥15 °F during
                                              citation for the EPA to evaluate this                   or work practice requirements. See 80                 stage 3 alerts, the prohibition on the use
                                              claim. Accordingly, the EPA has no                      FR 33889, June 12, 2015. Accordingly,                 of all solid-fuel heating devices,
                                              information suggesting that Alaska has                  a SIP that includes a combination of                  masonry heaters, pellet fuel burning
                                              stopped funding, or lacks resources to                  numerical limits or controls that are                 appliances, cook stoves, fireplaces, or
                                              make progress in improving air quality                  sufficiently stringent, and are legally               waste oil burning appliances does not
                                              in the FNSB NAA. In fact, ADEC                          and practically enforceable, can                      apply. However, the stage 2 prohibition
                                              currently is devoting resources to the                  effectively operate together to limit                 on the use of uncertified solid-fuel
                                              development of a Serious area                           emissions from a source on a                          heating devices and hydronic heaters
                                              attainment plan and the Borough is                      continuous basis.                                     that are not EPA Phase II qualified
                                              implementing local control measures                        Second, the EPA disagrees with the                 continues to apply. In addition, even
                                              incorporated into the SIP. In addition,                 commenter’s view that the low                         when the temperature limitation on the
                                              as indicated previously, the EPA found                  temperature limitation on the                         applicability of stage 3 alerts applies,
                                              that in its infrastructure SIP for the 2006             applicability of the mandatory solid-fuel             the users of solid-fuel heating devices
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                                              24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS, Alaska                             heating device curtailment requirement                must continue to meet the applicable
                                              demonstrated that it had ‘‘adequate                     necessarily constitutes an impermissible              opacity emission limitation and
                                              resources to implement, maintain, and                   exemption in the emissions limitation,                continue to comply with the
                                              enforce the standards’’ and thus met the                because the curtailment requirement                   requirement to burn only dry, properly
                                              110(a)(2)(E)(i) requirement for adequate                works in conjunction with other specific              seasoned wood (with a moisture content
                                              resources. 79 FR 66651, November 10,                    control measures in the SIP that                      of 20% or less). Thus, the EPA believes
                                              2014.                                                   continue to apply and limit emissions                 that the opacity limit and dry wood


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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                       42465

                                              requirement work in conjunction with                    respect to these specific regulations. For            advisories, which are not restricted to
                                              the mandatory curtailment program to                    the reasons stated in the following                   the open burning season. As provided in
                                              limit emissions from solid-fuel heating                 paragraphs, we disagree that the                      18 AAC 50.065(e), the air quality
                                              devices on a continuous basis, even for                 submitted regulations constitute                      advisory pertaining to open burning is
                                              stage 3 alerts that occur during periods                relaxations, and thus the inclusion of                based on a determination that there is or
                                              of extreme cold.                                        these measures into the SIP as part of                will likely be inadequate ventilation to
                                                 The EPA notes that Alaska is                         the FNSB Moderate Plan does not raise                 maintain ambient air quality standards,
                                              currently in the process of developing                  concerns related to CAA section 110(l).               including PM2.5.
                                              the Serious area plan for the FNSB                         Comment 12.a. 18 AAC 50.065(f).                      We also disagree with the
                                              NAA, and is reevaluating the need for                   Wood Smoke Control and PM 2.5                         commenter’s assertion that the
                                              additional emission reductions to attain                Nonattainment Areas. The commenter                    amendments to 18 AAC 50.065(f) are a
                                              the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS. In                        objected to our approval of a provision               relaxation of existing SIP measures. The
                                              particular, Alaska is considering the                   that prohibits open burning from                      dates of the open burning prohibition
                                              need for emissions reductions during                    November 1 to March 31 because Alaska                 remain the same as when the EPA last
                                              periods of extremely low temperatures,                  did ‘‘not adequately explain how the                  approved 18 AAC 50.065(f) into the
                                              which can often coincide with                           dates for the open burning ban were                   Alaska SIP in 1998. 63 FR 63983,
                                              meteorological conditions most likely to                chosen.’’ The commenter expressed                     November 18, 1998. More importantly,
                                              result in inversions and exceedances of                 concern that exceedances of the 2006                  the amendments to 18 AAC 50.065(f)
                                              the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.                           24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS may occur                         make the open burning prohibition
                                              Specifically, on July 18, 2017, Alaska                  outside the November 1 to March 31                    applicable to PM2.5 nonattainment areas,
                                              proposed regulatory revisions to                        open burning prohibition season. The                  whereas previously the prohibition
                                              eliminate the current temperature                       commenter also objected to language in                applied only to PM10 wood smoke
                                              threshold limitation as part of its efforts             the FNSB Moderate Plan that would                     control areas. Therefore, the
                                              to develop a Serious area plan. The EPA                 allow a local open burn permit program                amendments to 18 AAC 50.065(f) that
                                              supports the further efforts of Alaska                  to replace the current open burning                   extend the regulation to PM2.5
                                              and the Borough to address the difficult,               prohibition at some point in the future               nonattainment areas in fact strengthen
                                              but necessary issue of controlling                      because it is ‘‘worded so vaguely                     the existing SIP.
                                              emissions during periods of extreme                     without any limits’’ and does not                       Similarly, we disagree with the
                                              low temperatures.                                       specify ‘‘a process for State approval’’ or           commenter’s view that inclusion of the
                                                 Finally, the EPA agrees with the                     ‘‘minimum program requirements,                       language contemplating a potential
                                              commenter that state and local control                  including record-keeping, public                      future open burn permit program to
                                              measures in the SIP need to be legally                  reporting, and adequate enforcement                   replace the current open burning
                                              and practically enforceable. A core                     authority.’’ Additionally, the commenter              prohibition is a relaxation of the
                                              principal of the CAA is that the EPA’s                  stated that ‘‘[i]f it is necessary to                 existing Alaska SIP. First, as stated
                                              approval of a control measure into a SIP                authorize some variances to the seasonal              previously, the current SIP-approved
                                              makes the measure a federally-                          open burn ban—for example, for                        regulation applies only to PM10 wood
                                              enforceable component of the SIP that                   legitimate ceremonial or limited                      smoke control areas and Alaska has now
                                              the State, the EPA or citizens can                      recreational purposes—the State should                extended it to PM2.5 nonattainment
                                              enforce in the event of violations. In this             have adopted detailed regulatory                      areas as well. Second, as required by 18
                                              final action, the EPA is approving into                 language identifying the types of                     AAC 50.065(f)(1) and (2), if a local area
                                              the Alaska SIP, among other control                     activities that might be eligible for a               elects to develop an open burn permit
                                              measures, the mandatory solid-fuel                      local variance and necessary conditions               program instead of the current open
                                              heating device curtailment program, the                 for any such variance.’’                              burn prohibition, it may only do so if
                                              20% opacity emission limitation, and                       Response 12.a. We disagree with the                the program (i) does not cause or
                                              the dry wood requirement, and these                     comment that Alaska did not adequately                contribute to violations of the PM2.5
                                              measures will become federally-                         explain the dates of the open burning                 NAAQS and (ii) is approved into the
                                              enforceable elements of the SIP for the                 prohibition, November 1 to March 31, in               State Air Quality Control Plan as
                                              FNSB NAA.                                               the FNSB Moderate Plan. We believe                    adopted in 18 AAC 50.030. We have
                                                                                                      that the discussion of the open burning               determined that Alaska’s amendment of
                                              C. Comments on Rules                                    prohibition is adequate, including                    18 AAC 50.065 to extend the open
                                                Comment 12: One commenter claimed                     Alaska’s explicit consideration of                    burning prohibition to PM2.5
                                              that the EPA must disapprove the FNSB                   lengthening the open burning                          nonattainment areas while
                                              Moderate Plan because it ‘‘includes                     prohibition to include October and                    simultaneously allowing the future
                                              undesirable and unlawful relaxations of                 April. See FNSB Moderate Plan                         option of a local air quality open burn
                                              existing SIP measures, in violation of                  III.D.5.7–22. As noted by the                         permit program is therefore not a
                                              CAA Section 110(l).’’ For this reason,                  commenter, Alaska explained that it                   relaxation, but a strengthening of the
                                              the commenter objected to six specific                  analyzed air quality data for October                 current SIP.
                                              State regulations that Alaska included                  and April and did not identify                          Regarding the commenter’s concern
                                              in the FNSB Moderate Plan.                              ‘‘significant air quality deterioration in            that the amendment is vague and does
                                                Response 12: In light of this comment,                those months as a result of normal open               not provide limits or specify a process
                                              the EPA reanalyzed the six regulations                  burning’’ and therefore, did not                      for state approval of a local open burn
                                              identified by the commenter. A                          lengthen the open burning prohibition                 permit program, we note that the
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                                              comparison of the State regulations                     to include those two months. Regarding                provision does not itself constitute an
                                              submitted to the EPA for review and                     the commenter’s concern that                          approval of any such local open burn
                                              approval into the SIP against existing                  exceedances of the 2006 24-hour PM2.5                 permit program. The provision merely
                                              SIP provisions is provided in the docket                NAAQS may occur outside the open                      contemplates such a permitting program
                                              for this action. We respond in the                      burning prohibition season, we note that              in the future, and one that would have
                                              following paragraphs to the concerns                    under 18 AAC 50.065(e), ADEC can also                 to meet certain requirements. For
                                              identified by the commenter with                        prohibit open burning during air quality              example, the condition in 18 AAC


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                                              42466            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                              50.065(f)(1) that a local open burn                     a violation of the PM2.5 standard, would              heat and financial hardship are an
                                              permit program cannot cause or                          be when a locality develops and then                  absolute necessity.’’ Additionally, the
                                              contribute to violations of the PM2.5                   submits such a permit program to                      commenter stated that Alaska should
                                              NAAQS provides one appropriate                          Alaska and the EPA for review. At                     adopt a curtailment program similar to
                                              limitation on potential open burn                       present, 18 AAC 50.065(f) merely                      one in Sacramento, California. The
                                              permit programs. Additionally, Alaska                   clarifies that localities can chose to                commenter also suggested that ‘‘to ease
                                              has an established process for approving                pursue a permit program in lieu of an                 the impact of a mandatory, episodic
                                              plans and adopting them into 18 AAC                     outright seasonal prohibition on open                 wood-burning curtailment program on
                                              50.030. The condition in 18 AAC                         burning. To the extent the commenter is               community members,’’ Alaska should
                                              50.065(f)(2) that the local open burn                   concerned about reliance on a local,                  adopt a ‘‘fuel oil subsidy program that
                                              permit program must be included in the                  rather than state permitting program, we              would help offset the additional
                                              State Air Quality Control Plan adopted                  previously determined that Alaska                     expense of fuel oil use.’’
                                              by reference in 18 AAC 50.030 provides                  provided necessary assurances that                      Response 12.b. The EPA disagrees
                                              an appropriate state process for                        ‘‘where the State has relied on a local or            that the addition of new 18 AAC
                                              evaluation and approval of any such                     regional government, agency, or                       50.075(d) creates a relaxation of existing
                                              potential program in the future. We also                instrumentality for the implementation                18 AAC 50.075(b) as contemplated by
                                              note that if Alaska seeks to create such                of any SIP provision, the State has                   CAA section 110(l). We note that
                                              an open burn permit program in the                      responsibility for ensuring adequate                  paragraph (b) only prohibits operation
                                              FNSB NAA in the future, that will                       implementation of the SIP’’ with respect              of a wood-fired heating device in an
                                              require a SIP revision subject to EPA                   to the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS as                    area for which Alaska has declared an
                                              review and approval, including an                       required by CAA section                               air quality episode with respect to SO2,
                                              analysis that the SIP revision would not                110(a)(2)(E)(iii). 79 FR 66651, November              carbon monoxide (CO), or PM10, in
                                              be less stringent than the current SIP in               10, 2014.                                             accordance with 18 AAC 50.245.
                                              accordance with the requirements of                        Finally, we disagree with the                      Neither 18 AAC 50.075(b) nor 18 AAC
                                              CAA 110(l). Alaska has confirmed that                   commenter’s suggestion that a future                  50.245 explicitly applied to PM2.5.
                                              the approval of any open burn permit                    open burn permit program would have                   Alaska has specifically added the new
                                              program in the future must be submitted                 to address the process for variances                  18 AAC 50.075(d), and the related new
                                              to the EPA as a SIP revision. Alaska’s                  related to ceremonial and recreational                18 AAC 50.246, to impose a comparable
                                              interpretation letter is included in the                fires. We note that ceremonial and                    prohibition on wood-fired heating
                                              docket for this action.8                                recreational fires are specifically                   devices in areas for which Alaska has
                                                With respect to the commenter’s                       excluded from Alaska’s amended                        declared an air quality episode
                                              concern that the language in the FNSB                   definition of open burning in 18 AAC                  specifically for purposes of the PM2.5
                                              Moderate Plan that contemplates                         50.990(65)(B). Because these activities               NAAQS. The existing prohibition on
                                              potential future open burn permit                       are not subject to the open burning                   operation of wood-fired heating devices
                                              programs in lieu of the prohibition on                  prohibition, there would not be a need                in 18 AAC 50.075(b) is thus unaffected
                                              open burning is vaguely worded and                      for future variances related to such fires.           by the addition of 18 AAC 50.075(d),
                                              provides no indication of ‘‘what                        We agree, however, that to the extent a               which applies only to PM2.5.
                                              constitutes a lawful local air quality                  future permitting program may include                 Furthermore, the addition of paragraph
                                              open burn permit program and no limit                   a process for seeking variances for                   (d) provides limitations on solid-fuel
                                              to the range of activities that might be                activities subject to the burn ban,                   heating device operation in PM2.5
                                              authorized . . .’’ the EPA agrees that the              provisions related to such variances                  nonattainment areas that previously did
                                              amendment leaves unaddressed many                       should provide adequate definitions and               not exist in the Alaska SIP. Therefore,
                                              aspects of a local open burn permit                     specifications to allow for necessary                 we consider the addition of paragraph
                                              program that would need further                         implementation and enforcement, as                    (d) to be a necessary strengthening of
                                              development and clarification. Also, as                 well as evaluation by Alaska and the
                                                                                                                                                            the existing SIP, not a relaxation.
                                              noted previously, any future local open                 EPA before approval as a revision to the                However, we believe the commenter
                                              burn permit program that is developed                   current SIP.                                          raised valid concerns with the waiver
                                              to operate in lieu of the open burning                     Comment 12.b. 18 AAC 50.075(d).
                                                                                                                                                            provisions in 18 AAC 50.075(d)(2). The
                                              prohibition must be submitted to Alaska                 Solid Fuel-fired Heating Device Visible
                                                                                                                                                            EPA is not taking final action on these
                                              for incorporation into the State Air                    Emission Standards. The commenter
                                                                                                                                                            waiver provisions because they are no
                                              Quality Control Plan and then                           objected to the addition of 18 AAC
                                                                                                                                                            longer part of the submitted FNSB
                                              submitted to the EPA for review and                     50.075(d) which limits solid fuel-fired
                                                                                                      heating device operation during PM2.5                 Moderate Plan. On July 26, 2017, Alaska
                                              approval. Accordingly, assuming a local                                                                       withdrew 18 AAC 50.075(d)(2) from its
                                              open burn permit program is developed                   air quality episodes. The commenter
                                                                                                      claimed that the provisions weaken                    SIP submission. The withdrawal letter is
                                              in the future, the appropriate time to                                                                        included in the docket for this action.9
                                              consider the issues the commenter                       another part of the existing SIP-
                                                                                                      approved portion of the regulation,                     With respect to the comments about
                                              raises, e.g., the range of activities                                                                         the type of curtailment program and the
                                              authorized by the program,                              paragraph (b), by providing conditions
                                                                                                      for lifting a prohibition on the use of               suggestion that state and local officials
                                              recordkeeping and reporting                                                                                   provide a fuel oil subsidy, we note that
                                              requirements, adequate enforcement                      wood-fired heating devices during an air
                                                                                                      quality episode. The commenter also                   states have discretion in formulating
                                              authority, and other aspects that pertain                                                                     their attainment plans, so long as they
                                              to the lawfulness of the program,                       objected to the provisions that allow for
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                                                                                                      a temporary waiver from the                           meet the applicable requirements of the
                                              including whether the program                                                                                 Act. In the FNSB NAA, Alaska has
                                              adequately assures that permitted open                  requirement because they are ‘‘too broad
                                                                                                      and too discretionary.’’ However, the                 adopted a number of control measures
                                              burning will not cause or contribute to
                                                                                                      commenter acknowledged that due to                      9 See ADEC letter, Withdrawal of items from the
                                                8 See ADEC letter, Clarification regarding Open
                                                                                                      the ‘‘extremely cold winter and high                  State Implementation Plan submittal for the
                                              Burning regulation 18 AAC 50.065(f), July 13, 2017,     price of fuel in Fairbanks, exemptions                Fairbanks North Star Borough nonattainment area,
                                              in the docket for this action.                          from curtailment for a sole source of                 July 26, 2017, in the docket for this action.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                        42467

                                              to address emissions from solid fuel                       Regarding the commenter’s suggestion               solid-fuel heating devices that are to be
                                              heating devices that are designed to                    that Alaska use a more simplified wood                installed in the FNSB NAA meet
                                              help the area attain the 2006 24-hour                   moisture labeling system for this                     stringent emissions standards. Alaska’s
                                              PM2.5 NAAQS given the facts and                         program, such as ‘‘dry’’ or ‘‘wet,’’ we               emissions standards for wood-fired
                                              circumstances of this particular area. As               note that states have discretion in                   heating devices in 18 AAC 50.077 are
                                              we stated in our proposed rule, we                      formulating their attainment plans, so                similar to, or more stringent than, the
                                              believe the mandatory solid-fuel heating                long as they meet the applicable                      EPA’s current New Source Performance
                                              device curtailment program in the FNSB                  requirements of the Act. In this                      Standards for new residential wood
                                              Moderate Plan is appropriately suited                   instance, we believe that the method of               heaters and hydronic heaters (wood
                                              for the FNSB NAA in that it provides for                labeling moisture content adopted by                  heater NSPS). 80 FR 13672, March 16,
                                              implementation of a curtailment                         Alaska adequately conveys the                         2015. However, we believe the
                                              program that will reduce emissions in a                 necessary information to wood users to                commenter is incorrect in claiming that
                                              manner that can facilitate program                      facilitate the related requirement to burn            18 AAC 50.077 contains exemptions
                                              adoption and implementation by the                      only dry wood, and thus the alternative               based on device size because all devices
                                              community. 82 FR 9046, February 2,                      form of labelling suggested by the                    are addressed, whether they are rated
                                              2017. Again, we anticipate that Alaska                  commenter is not required. We are                     under 350,000 Btu per hour or greater
                                              will be reexamining its approach to                     therefore approving Alaska’s                          than 350,000 Btu per hour. The
                                              controlling emissions from this source                  regulations, including the requirement                provisions in 18 AAC 50.077(b) and (c)
                                              as part of the development of the                       that wood sellers document three                      provide emissions standards for devices
                                              Serious area attainment plan for the                    moisture content measurements on the                  ‘‘rated under 350,000 Btu per hour’’ for
                                              FNSB NAA, in order to identify and                      moisture content disclosure. The EPA                  hydronic heaters and wood stoves,
                                              adopt BACM/BACT level controls, as                      notes that the mandatory component of                 respectively, whereas 18 AAC 50.077(d)
                                              appropriate. At that time, Alaska may                   Alaska’s wood seller registration                     provides emissions standards for wood-
                                              reevaluate approaches that have been                    program was implemented on August                     fired heating devices that have a ‘‘rated
                                              successfully adopted and implemented                    15, 2017.                                             size of 350,000 Btu or greater per hour.’’
                                              in other nonattainment areas and new                       Comment 12.d. 18 AAC 50.077.                       Thus, 18 AAC 50.077 does not contain
                                              approaches suggested by the public.                     Standards for Wood-fired Heating                      the exemptions described by the
                                                 Comment 12.c. 18 AAC 50.076. Solid                   Devices. The commenter supported                      commenter. Additionally, 18 AAC
                                              Fuel-fired Heating Device Fuel                          Alaska’s emissions standard for new                   50.077(b), (c), and (d) each require
                                              Requirements; Registration of                           installations of wood-fired heating                   devices to meet EPA standards or meet
                                              Commercial Wood Sellers. The                            devices in 18 AAC 50.077 as a critical                the same ‘‘particulate matter annual
                                              commenter generally supported this                      step toward improving air quality in the              average emission limit of 2.5 grams per
                                              regulation, which sets forth                            FNSB NAA, but objected to the ‘‘scaling               hour.’’
                                              requirements for fuels that can be used                 of the standard’’ and asserted that there
                                              in solid fuel-fired heating devices.                    ‘‘should be no exception for small or                    We disagree with the comment that
                                              However, the commenter expressed                        large devices’’ and that ‘‘devices larger             Alaska did not establish emission
                                              concern that it does not require year-                  than 350,000 BTUs should be required                  standards for new coal-burning device
                                              round use of ‘‘dry’’ or ‘‘seasoned’’ wood               to meet the same emissions standard.’’                installations in the FNSB Moderate
                                              like the Borough ordinance does and                     The commenter also stated that Alaska                 Plan. Although the commenter is correct
                                              stated that the EPA must explicitly                     failed to give a reasonable justification             that 18 AAC 50.077 does not establish
                                              approve the Borough ordinance as an                     for not strengthening 18 AAC 50.077 by                such emission standards, the emission
                                              enforceable part of the SIP. In addition,               establishing an emission standard for                 standards for ‘‘Borough listed
                                              the commenter stated that the                           coal burning devices. Additionally, the               appliances’’ in section 020 of Borough
                                              mandatory component of Alaska’s wood                    commenter expressed concern that                      code chapter 21.28 apply to coal heating
                                              seller registration program should apply                wood-fired heating devices that do not                devices. Additionally, section 030.A
                                              immediately, not when the area is                       meet the 18 AAC 50.077 emission                       prohibits the installation of a solid fuel
                                              reclassified to Serious and suggested                   standards can be sold if they are to be               burning appliance in the FNSB NAA if
                                              that Alaska use ‘‘a simple’’ wood                       installed outside the FNSB NAA and                    the appliance is not listed by the
                                              moisture content labeling program that                  that only a written confirmation is                   Borough. We note that ‘‘solid fuel
                                              identifies the wood as ‘‘dry’’ or ‘‘wet.’’              required from the buyer stating that the              burning appliance’’ is defined in section
                                                 Response 12.c. The EPA notes that                    device will be installed and used in an               010 to include coal stoves, coal-fired
                                              Alaska included the provision identified                area other than the FNSB NAA. The                     hydronic heaters, and coal-fired
                                              by the commenter, Borough code                          commenter requested that the address                  furnaces. Alaska adopted Borough code
                                              21.28.030.F, in the FNSB Moderate Plan                  where the non-conforming device will                  chapter 21.28 sections 010, 020, and 030
                                              in its November 23, 2016 supplemental                   be installed should be included in the                into the FNSB Moderate Plan that was
                                              submission. Borough code 21.28.030.F                    confirmation, that the confirmation be                submitted to the EPA on November 23,
                                              lists the types of fuels that cannot be                 notarized, and that sellers be required to            2016. Upon the effective date of this
                                              burned in a solid-fuel heating device.                  keep the confirmation for 5 years.                    action, these Borough provisions will be
                                              This provision applies at all times and                 Although not directly related to 18 AAC               adopted into the federally-approved SIP.
                                              prohibits the burning of wood that has                  50.077, the commenter also stated that                Thus, Alaska has imposed emission
                                              a moisture content greater than 20                      the requirement for replacing                         controls on coal fired stoves in the
                                              percent. The local rules that Alaska                    uncertified wood stoves at time of home               FNSB NAA sufficient for purposes of
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                                              included in the FNSB Moderate Plan                      sale should be adopted and                            the FNSB Moderate Plan. Alaska
                                              will become a part of the federally-                    implemented immediately, rather than                  acknowledged the public health
                                              approved SIP. Accordingly, upon the                     set aside for future implementation as a              concerns associated with emissions
                                              effective date of this action, Borough                  contingency measure in the FNSB                       from coal fired stoves in the FNSB
                                              code 21.28.030.F will thus become a                     Moderate Plan.                                        Moderate Plan and the EPA anticipates
                                              federally-enforceable component of the                     Response 12.d. The EPA agrees with                 that Alaska will further evaluate
                                              SIP applicable in the FNSB NAA.                         the commenter that it is important that               potential controls for these sources in


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                                              42468            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                              the development of the Serious area                     Moderate Plan, the word ‘‘curtailment’’               version of 18 AAC 50.245 approved into
                                              plan.                                                   is used in a general sense and does not               the Alaska SIP provides that ADEC will
                                                 We also disagree with the commenter                  apply to a particular category of sources.            declare air quality advisories. In the
                                              regarding the need to revise the written                Therefore, we do not take issue with the              FNSB Moderate Plan, Alaska has
                                              confirmation requirements in 18 AAC                     use of the word ‘‘curtailment’’ in 18                 revised the rule to provide that either
                                              50.077(f) for sales of wood-fired heating               AAC 50.246 or the fact that it lacks a                ADEC ‘‘or a local air quality control
                                              devices to be installed outside of the                  specific regulatory definition.                       program’’ will declare the advisories.
                                              FNSB NAA to include additional                             Second, we acknowledge that under                  The commenter objected to these
                                              requirements such as notarization and                   18 AAC 50.246(c)(1), curtailments are                 revisions because ‘‘they do not specify
                                              retention of forms. The requirements of                 voluntary ‘‘from any person issued a                  a single authority responsible for air
                                              18 AAC 50.077(f) specify that all new                   permit under this chapter whose                       alerts’’ and ‘‘there is potential for
                                              wood-fired heating devices to be                        stationary source’s emissions might                   confusion and inaction.’’ The
                                              installed or used in the FNSB NAA                       impact the area subject to the advisory.’’            commenter also stated that Alaska
                                              must meet certain emission standards                    Thus, the commenter is correct that                   ‘‘should not delegate authority to a local
                                              and provides that a person who intends                  compliance with the curtailment                       air quality control program that is
                                              to sell or otherwise convey a wood-fired                contemplated in this provision is                     unwilling or unable to fully implement
                                              heating device that does not meet those                 voluntary for the affected stationary                 regulatory requirements.’’
                                              standards must receive written                          sources (Alaska defines ‘‘stationary
                                                                                                                                                               Response 12.f. The EPA disagrees that
                                              confirmation from the buyer or operator                 source’’ in AS 46.14.990 as ‘‘any
                                              that the device will not be installed or                building, structure, facility, or                     authorizing the relevant local air quality
                                              used in the FNSB NAA. The EPA                           installation which emits or may emit a                control program (i.e., here the Borough)
                                              believes that this provision provides                   regulated NSR pollutant’’). However, we               to declare advisories, as well as ADEC,
                                              sufficient notice (in addition to the                   note that 18 AAC 50.246(c)(1) applies                 is an inappropriate revision of the
                                              regulatory text of 18 AAC 50.077 and                    only to permitted stationary sources and              existing SIP. Under 18 AAC 50.245,
                                              other education and outreach efforts                    it applies statewide.                                 ADEC or a local air quality control
                                              conducted by ADEC and the Borough) to                      By contrast, Alaska has adopted a                  program may declare air quality
                                              potential buyers of the prohibition on                  mandatory curtailment program for the                 episodes and advisories for SO2, PM10,
                                              such installations in the FNSB NAA and                  FNSB NAA that applies to all solid-fuel               and CO.11 The commenter’s concern
                                              adequately documents their awareness                    heating devices in the event that Alaska              about potential confusion in areas that
                                              and agreement to comply. Although the                   or the Borough issues an alert based on               have a local air quality program, such as
                                              additional requirements suggested by                    high ambient PM2.5 levels. Compliance                 the FNSB NAA, is addressed by the
                                              the commenter may be helpful, we                        with the solid-fuel heating device                    requirements of AS 46.14.400, which
                                              believe the current requirements                        curtailment is mandatory, not voluntary.              provides authority for ADEC to
                                              devised by Alaska are sufficient.                       We believe that the provision at 18 AAC               authorize local air quality control
                                                 With respect to the comment that                     50.075(e), in conjunction with 18 AAC                 programs to operate in lieu of ADEC’s
                                              Alaska should implement immediately                     50.246, provides Alaska authority to                  air quality program. Under AS
                                              the requirement for replacing                           prohibit the operation of solid-fuel                  46.14.400(d), a cooperative agreement
                                              uncertified wood stoves at the time of                  heating devices in the FNSB NAA. The                  between ADEC and the local air quality
                                              home sale, rather than implement it as                  prohibition on the operation of solid-                district must specify, among other
                                              a future contingency measure, the EPA                   fuel heating devices issued under 18                  things, the respective duties and
                                              notes that the measure has been                         AAC 50.075(e) and Borough code                        enforcement responsibilities of the local
                                              implemented. The requirement became                     21.28.050 provide Alaska the ability to               air quality district and ADEC. Thus,
                                              effective on June 9, 2017, the effective                implement advisories and prescribe                    where a local air quality district has
                                              date of reclassification of the area to                 actions as a backstop to the Borough’s                been authorized to administer a local air
                                              Serious. 82 FR 21711, May 10, 2017.10                   existing solid-fuel heating device                    quality control program and declare
                                                 Comment 12.e. 18 AAC 50.246. Air                     curtailment program, which is                         alerts, the Memorandum of
                                              Quality Episodes and Advisories for                     incorporated in the State Air Quality                 Understanding (MOU) specifies that
                                              PM2.5. The commenter expressed                          Control Plan, adopted by reference in 18              responsibility. The MOU between ADEC
                                              concerns that compliance with                           AAC 50.030, and is also being adopted                 and the Borough (ADEC–FNSB MOU)
                                              curtailments remain voluntary under                     into the federally-approved SIP in this               was submitted with the FNSB Moderate
                                              the 18 AAC 50.246 provisions for PM2.5                  action. Specifically, Borough code                    Plan. FNSB Moderate Plan appendix
                                              air quality episodes and advisories and                 21.28.050 requires the issuance of                    III.D.5.12–54. It specifies that the
                                              that the provisions ‘‘do not protect                    advisories or alerts when PM2.5                       Borough will ‘‘continue to implement,
                                              public health in Fairbanks or promote                   concentrations are expected to reach                  as needed, the Borough’s emergency
                                              attainment of the 24-hour PM2.5                         certain levels (defined as Stage 1, Stage             episode prevention and response plan
                                              NAAQS.’’ The commenter also objected                    2 and Stage 3). These alerts impose                   for CO.’’ The ADEC–FNSB MOU does
                                              to the lack of a definition for the word                mandatory restrictions on the operation               not identify the Borough as the
                                              ‘‘curtailment.’’                                        of solid-fuel heating devices in the                  authority for declaring alerts for SO2
                                                 Response 12.e. First, we disagree with               FNSB NAA, or specified Air Quality                    and PM10, thus ADEC would declare
                                              the commenter’s concern about the                       Control Zone. Accordingly, both Alaska                those air alerts. The EPA believes that
                                              absence of a specific definition of the                 and the Borough have authority to                     although 18 AAC 50.245 does not
                                              term curtailment. In Alaska’s current                   impose a mandatory curtailment on the                 specify one authority for calling SO2,
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                                              SIP-approved regulations and the                        operation of solid-fuel heating devices               PM10, and CO alerts, the MOU required
                                              regulations submitted with the FNSB                     during PM2.5 air quality episodes. See                by Alaska statute adequately specifies
                                                                                                      FNSB Moderate Plan III.D.5.11–3.                      the entity responsible for calling alerts
                                                10 See ADEC letter Wood-Fired Heating Device
                                                                                                         Comment 12.f. 18 AAC 50.245(b) and                 when it is not ADEC.
                                              Requirement—Remove or Replace Non Compliant
                                              Devices Upon Property Sale, Lease or Conveyance—
                                                                                                      (c). Air Quality Episodes and Advisories
                                              Effective Date: June 9, 2017, in the docket for this    for Air Pollutants other than PM2.5. The                11 The EPA notes that Alaska addresses PM
                                                                                                                                                                                                        2.5 air
                                              action.                                                 commenter noted that the current                      quality episodes and advisories in 18 AAC 50.246.



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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                              42469

                                                 We also believe that the requirements                ‘‘[a]nother study of premature mortality              in parts of the nonattainment area that
                                              of AS 46.14.400(d) address the                          in our area is needed.’’ This commenter               are not routinely and continuously
                                              commenter’s concern that Alaska                         also expressed concerns about air                     monitored by the Borough or the State.
                                              should not delegate authority to a local                quality monitoring, claiming that the                 Special purpose monitors supplement
                                              air quality control program that is                     ‘‘air quality is getting worse,’’ that                the monitoring network used for
                                              unwilling or unable to fully implement                  Alaska has tried ‘‘to disprove                        meeting the EPA’s minimum monitoring
                                              regulatory requirements. The                            monitoring data from a Neighborhood                   requirements found in appendix D of 40
                                              cooperative agreement must specify the                  site in North Pole by claiming it is a                CFR part 58. Monitors used for
                                              respective enforcement responsibilities                 microliter,’’ and that Alaska removed a               satisfying the EPA’s minimum
                                              of the local air quality district and                   special purpose monitor ‘‘known as the                monitoring requirements remain at a
                                              ADEC. According to the ADEC–FNSB                        Watershed Monitor from an area in                     fixed location for an extended period
                                              MOU, ADEC has enforcement                               Fairbanks where levels were recorded                  (longer than 24 months) so that air
                                              responsibility for all currently permitted              for many months (months in three                      quality measurements can be used for
                                              facilities that are under ADEC authority.               consecutive years) often higher than the              regulatory decision making purposes.
                                              ADEC and the Borough have joint                         North Pole Monitor.’’ The commenter                   Special purpose monitoring data
                                              responsibility for responding to public                 also noted that a ‘‘MetOne                            augment the data collected from the
                                              complaints about air pollution within                   Neighborhood Monitor in the area                      minimum required network and are
                                              the Borough. The ADEC–FNSB MOU                          continues to show dangerously high                    used to ensure that this minimum
                                              provides a flow chart for identifying                   levels.’’                                             monitoring network is appropriately
                                              appropriate enforcement actions for the                    Response 13: We agree with the                     sited and adequately represents the air
                                              Borough to take, for ADEC to take, or for               concerns about high ambient PM2.5                     quality of the community. As such, it is
                                              joint enforcement actions. See FNSB                     levels in the FNSB NAA. We                            not uncommon for special purpose
                                              Moderate Plan appendix III.D.5.12–57.                   acknowledge that control measures have                monitors to be operated for only a short
                                              Additionally, as we stated earlier,                     been adopted into the FNSB Moderate                   duration at any given location. In its
                                              Alaska has provided necessary                           Plan to improve air quality and although              monitoring network plan, Alaska
                                              assurances that ‘‘where the State has                   the PM2.5 values generally have                       explained that special purpose monitors
                                              relied on a local or regional government,               decreased, they remain high. However,                 are moved to better understand the air
                                              agency, or instrumentality for the                      we note that the high monitored PM2.5                 quality impacts experienced in various
                                              implementation of any SIP provision,                    values are not a basis for disapproval of             neighborhoods and that the special
                                              the State has responsibility for ensuring               the FNSB Moderate Plan. The EPA has                   purpose monitoring sites usually remain
                                              adequate implementation of the SIP’’                    already reclassified the FNSB NAA from                in one location for two to six weeks.12
                                              with respect to the 2006 24-hour PM2.5                  Moderate to Serious because these high                In addition, the EPA appreciates the
                                              NAAQS as required by CAA section                        monitored values indicated continued                  community’s willingness to assist in
                                              110(a)(2)(E)(iii). 79 FR 66651, November                nonattainment, which under CAA                        citizen monitoring and recognizes that
                                              10, 2014. In the event that a local air                 sections 188 and 189, imposes                         achieving air quality goals in the FNSB
                                              quality control program is not meeting                  additional and more stringent                         NAA is a collaborative effort.
                                              its responsibilities, the EPA anticipates               attainment plan requirements. 82 FR                      Comment 14: One commenter stated
                                              that Alaska will take appropriate steps                 21711, May 10, 2017. This                             that the FNSB Moderate Plan included
                                              to assure that the SIP is properly                      reclassification obligates Alaska to                  ‘‘mitigation efforts from state legislative
                                              implemented and enforced within all                     reevaluate and strengthen its attainment              grants obtained by Rep. Tammie Wilson
                                              areas of the state, as required by the                  plan control strategy as necessary to                 that were not scientifically or practically
                                              CAA.                                                    meet the more stringent Serious area                  carried out and for which no report,
                                                                                                      requirements and to provide for                       data, or proper accounting is available.’’
                                              D. Other Comments                                       attainment of the 2006 24-hour PM2.5                     Response 14: We reviewed the FNSB
                                                 Comment 13: Two commenters                           NAAQS by the applicable Serious area                  Moderate Plan and did not identify
                                              expressed concern about the high PM2.5                  attainment date. Regarding the comment                mitigation efforts as suggested by the
                                              values recorded by ambient air quality                  that another study on premature                       commenter. Additionally, the
                                              monitors in the FNSB NAA. One                           mortality is needed, although such a                  commenter did not provide specific
                                              commenter noted that ‘‘the North Pole                   study may be a valuable source of
                                              Fire Station monitor currently records                                                                        information for the EPA to evaluate the
                                                                                                      information to the community, it is not
                                              the highest values in the non-attainment                                                                      claim that the FNSB Moderate Plan
                                                                                                      a requirement under the CAA as part of
                                              area’’ and ‘‘[t]he most recent design                                                                         relied on such efforts. The EPA
                                                                                                      an attainment plan and is therefore
                                              value was 124 mg/m3, that is, 354                                                                             therefore does not find this comment to
                                                                                                      beyond the scope of this action.
                                              percent of the 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.’’                      In response to the comments about air              provide a basis for disapproval of the
                                              The commenter further asserted that the                 quality monitors, we affirm that the                  FNSB Moderate Plan.
                                              ‘‘EPA and the State have a legal and a                                                                           Comment 15: One commenter stated
                                                                                                      North Pole Fire Station monitor
                                              moral obligation to develop a plan to                                                                         that Alaska ‘‘claimed they can’t meet
                                                                                                      continues to operate as a regulatory
                                              clean up the Borough’s polluted air.’’                  monitor and that it is a neighborhood                 CAA requirements without making any
                                              This commenter stated that ‘‘improved                   scale monitor. As discussed in our                    reasonable effort to do so.’’ This
                                              regulations to address wood smoke and                   proposal, the EPA expects that Alaska                 commenter also stated that the FNSB
                                              other sources of PM2.5 pollution are                    will include the data from the North                  Moderate Plan ‘‘does not appear to meet
                                              necessary to protect the health and                     Pole Fire Station monitor in the                      the Federal requirements or especially
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                                              welfare of Fairbanks residents,                         analyses for the development of a                     the spirit of the CAA,’’ and asked that
                                              especially children in the community.’’                 Serious area attainment plan for the                  ‘‘[i]f Alaska’s Moderate SIP is being
                                              In addition to expressing concerns about                FNSB NAA. 82 FR 9037, February 2,                     accepted because the Administrator of
                                              public health, the other commenter                      2017. Regarding the comment about the                   12 The EPA approved the 2015 Alaska annual
                                              described personal experiences with                     removal of the special purpose monitor,               monitoring network plan on October 28, 2015. See
                                              health issues ‘‘because of chronically                  the EPA is aware that high                            2015 Alaska Monitoring Network Approval Letter in
                                              poor air quality’’ and stated that                      concentrations of PM2.5 commonly exist                the docket for this action.



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                                              42470            Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                              the EPA failed to respond within the                    reclassification to Serious obligates                    incorporated by reference may conflict
                                              established timeline to Alaska’s SIP                    Alaska to reevaluate potential control                   with the EPA’s independent authorities.
                                              submission, then that should be made                    measures and strengthen its attainment                     With respect to local rules, we are
                                              clear.’’                                                plan control strategy as necessary to                    incorporating by reference Fairbanks
                                                 Response 15: The commenter did not                   meet the more stringent Serious area                     North Star Borough Code chapter 21.28
                                              provide specific information about the                  requirements.                                            sections 010, 020, 030 (except J), 050,
                                              claims made by Alaska that they cannot                                                                           and 060. We are approving, but not
                                              meet CAA requirements. We have                          III. Final Action
                                                                                                                                                               incorporating by reference, Fairbanks
                                              reviewed the FNSB Moderate Plan and                        Under CAA section 110(k), the EPA is                  North Star Borough Code chapter 21.28
                                              did not identify any such claims. As                    approving the FNSB Moderate Plan for                     section 030.J because it relates to
                                              discussed in our proposal, the EPA is                   the 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS.                            penalty provisions that if incorporated
                                              approving the FNSB Moderate Plan                                                                                 by reference may conflict with the
                                                                                                      Specifically, the EPA finds that the
                                              because we found that it meets the                                                                               EPA’s independent authorities. We are
                                                                                                      FNSB Moderate Plan meets the
                                              substantive statutory and regulatory                                                                             also approving, but not incorporating by
                                                                                                      substantive statutory and regulatory
                                              requirements for base-year and                                                                                   reference Fairbanks North Star Borough
                                                                                                      requirements for base-year and
                                              projected emissions inventories,                                                                                 Code chapter 21.28 sections 040 and
                                                                                                      projected emissions inventories,
                                              precursor demonstrations, analysis and                                                                           070 because they relate to funding for
                                                                                                      precursor demonstrations, analysis and
                                              imposition of RACM/RACT, RFP, QMs,                                                                               voluntary initiatives being undertaken
                                                                                                      imposition of RACM/RACT level
                                              and a demonstration that attainment by                                                                           by the Borough to reduce emissions of
                                                                                                      emission controls, RFP, QMs, and a
                                              the December 31, 2015 attainment date                                                                            PM2.5.
                                                                                                      demonstration that attainment by the
                                              was impracticable. See 82 FR 9053,
                                              February 2, 2017.                                       December 31, 2015 attainment date was                    IV. Incorporation by Reference
                                                 With respect to the commenter’s                      impracticable. In addition, the EPA is
                                                                                                      approving the 2017 motor vehicle                            In this rule, the EPA is finalizing
                                              question concerning whether this                                                                                 regulatory text that includes
                                              approval was influenced by the timing                   emissions budgets because they are
                                                                                                      derived from an approvable RFP                           incorporation by reference. In
                                              of the action, the EPA acknowledges                                                                              accordance with requirements of 1 CFR
                                              that our final action is outside of the                 demonstration and meet the
                                                                                                      requirements of CAA section 176(c) and                   51.5, the EPA is finalizing the
                                              timeline prescribed by the CAA. The
                                                                                                      40 CFR part 93, subpart A. The EPA is                    incorporation by reference of state and
                                              EPA’s inability to take timely action was
                                                                                                      also approving the exceptional events                    local regulations for solid-fuel heaters
                                              the result of a number of factors
                                                                                                      demonstrations. Accordingly, the EPA                     and open burning, as set forth in the
                                              including our ongoing work with Alaska
                                                                                                      finds that the FNSB Moderate Plan, for                   amendments to 40 CFR part 52. The
                                              to supplement the FNSB Moderate Plan.
                                                                                                      the FNSB NAA for the 2006 24-hour                        EPA has made, and will continue to
                                              However, as noted previously, the EPA’s
                                                                                                      PM2.5 NAAQS, meets applicable CAA                        make, these materials generally
                                              decision to approve the FNSB Moderate
                                                                                                      title I, part D requirements for purposes                available through http://
                                              Plan in this action is based on the
                                                                                                      of approval under section 110(k) of the                  www.regulations.gov and/or at the EPA
                                              content of the plan and its consistency
                                              with applicable statutory and regulatory                CAA.                                                     Region 10 Office (please contact the
                                              requirements, and was not influenced                                                                             person identified in the FOR FURTHER
                                                                                                         The EPA is approving the State Air
                                                                                                                                                               INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
                                              by the timing of our final action.                      Quality Control Plan and state and local
                                                 Comment 16: One commenter stated                                                                              preamble for more information).
                                                                                                      rules that were submitted as part of the
                                              that because the RACM/RACT analysis                                                                                 Therefore, these materials have been
                                                                                                      FNSB Moderate Plan on December 31,
                                              is flawed, the impracticability and RFP                                                                          approved by the EPA for inclusion in
                                                                                                      2014; January 29, 2015; March 11,
                                              demonstrations are inadequate. This                                                                              the State implementation plan, have
                                                                                                      2016; 13 and November 23, 2016. The
                                              commenter also stated that                                                                                       been incorporated by reference by the
                                                                                                      EPA is not acting on provisions that
                                              reclassification to Serious and the                                                                              EPA into that plan, are fully federally-
                                                                                                      Alaska withdrew from the SIP
                                              requirement that Alaska will ‘‘have to                                                                           enforceable under sections 110 and 113
                                                                                                      submissions.14 Specifically, we are
                                              submit amendments to its plan applying                                                                           of the CAA as of the effective date of the
                                                                                                      approving, but not incorporating by
                                              stricter control measures to bring the                                                                           final rulemaking of the EPA’s approval,
                                                                                                      reference, the following two sections of
                                              area into compliance, do not diminish                                                                            and will be incorporated by reference by
                                                                                                      the State Air Quality Control Plan:
                                              the importance of EPA’s decision on the                                                                          the Director of the Federal Register in
                                                                                                      Volume II, section III.D.5 and Volume
                                              State’s current plan . . .’’ and ‘‘does not                                                                      the next update to the SIP
                                                                                                      III, appendices, section III.D.5. We are
                                              relax the Clean Air Act’s requirements                                                                           compilation.15
                                                                                                      incorporating by reference the
                                              for the current submission.’’                           submitted revisions to title 18 of Alaska                V. Statutory and Executive Order
                                                 Response 16: As discussed in section                 Administrative Code (AAC), chapter 50                    Reviews
                                              II.A of this preamble, we disagree with                 (18 AAC 50) sections 007, 010, 025, 065,
                                              the comment that the RACM/RACT                                                                                     Under the CAA, the Administrator is
                                                                                                      075, 076 (except (g)(11), 077, 245, 246,
                                              analysis is flawed and we therefore                                                                              required to approve a SIP submission
                                                                                                      and 990. We are approving, but not
                                              disagree with the comment that the                                                                               that complies with the provisions of the
                                                                                                      incorporating by reference 18 AAC
                                              impracticability and RFP                                                                                         Act and applicable federal regulations.
                                                                                                      50.076(g)(11) because it relates to
                                              demonstrations are not approvable. We                                                                            42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
                                                                                                      enforcement provisions that if
                                              agree with the comment that                                                                                      Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, the
                                              reclassification to Serious does not relax                                                                       EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
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                                                                                                        13 We are not acting on the portions of the March
                                              the Moderate area requirements. Where                   11, 2016 submission that are unrelated to the FNSB
                                                                                                                                                               provided that they meet the criteria of
                                              we discussed reclassifying the FNSB                     Moderate Plan. We address those portions of the          the CAA. Accordingly, this action
                                              NAA to Serious in our proposal, our                     March 11, 2016 submission in separate actions.           merely approves state law as meeting
                                              intention was to explain that although                    14 See Alaska Department of Environmental
                                                                                                                                                               federal requirements and does not
                                                                                                      Conservation letter, Withdrawal of items from the        impose additional requirements beyond
                                              Alaska and the EPA considered certain                   State Implementation Plan submittal for the
                                              control measures infeasible in the                      Fairbanks North Star Borough nonattainment area,
                                              context of the FNSB Moderate Plan, the                  July 26, 2017, available in the docket for this action    15 62   FR 27968, May 22, 1997.



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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                                               42471

                                              those imposed by state law. For that                                 The Congressional Review Act, 5                                            PART 52—APPROVAL AND
                                              reason, this action:                                               U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small                                    PROMULGATION OF
                                                 • Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory                             Business Regulatory Enforcement                                              IMPLEMENTATION PLANS
                                              action’’ subject to review by the Office                           Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
                                              of Management and Budget under                                     that before a rule may take effect, the                                      ■ 1. The authority citation for part 52
                                              Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,                               agency promulgating the rule must                                            continues to read as follows:
                                              October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,                            submit a rule report, which includes a                                           Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
                                              January 21, 2011);                                                 copy of the rule, to each House of the
                                                 • does not impose an information                                Congress and to the Comptroller General                                      Subpart C—Alaska
                                              collection burden under the provisions                             of the United States. The EPA will
                                              of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44                                 submit a report containing this action                                       ■  2. In § 52.70:
                                              U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);                                              and other required information to the
                                                 • is certified as not having a                                  U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of
                                                                                                                                                                                              ■  a. The table in paragraph (c) is
                                              significant economic impact on a                                                                                                                amended by:
                                                                                                                 Representatives, and the Comptroller
                                              substantial number of small entities                               General of the United States prior to                                        ■ i. Adding the entry ‘‘18 AAC 50.007’’,
                                              under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5                            publication of the rule in the Federal                                       in numerical order;
                                              U.S.C. 601 et seq.);                                               Register. A major rule cannot take effect                                    ■ ii. Revising the entries ‘‘18 AAC
                                                 • does not contain any unfunded                                 until 60 days after it is published in the                                   50.010’’, ‘‘18 AAC 50.025’’, ‘‘18 AAC
                                              mandate or significantly or uniquely                                                                                                            50.065’’, and ‘‘18 AAC 50.075’’;
                                                                                                                 Federal Register. This action is not a
                                              affect small governments, as described
                                                                                                                 ‘‘major rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C.                                        ■ iii. Adding the entries ‘‘18 AAC
                                              in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                                                                                 804(2).                                                                      50.076’’ and ‘‘18 AAC 50.077’’, in
                                              of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
                                                 • does not have Federalism                                        Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean                                       numerical order;
                                              implications as specified in Executive                             Air Act, petitions for judicial review of                                    ■ iv. Revising the entry ‘‘18 AAC
                                              Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,                               this action must be filed in the United                                      50.245’’;
                                              1999);                                                             States Court of Appeals for the                                              ■ v. Adding the entry ‘‘18 AAC 50.246’’,
                                                 • is not an economically significant                            appropriate circuit by November 7,                                           in numerical order;
                                              regulatory action based on health or                               2017. Filing a petition for
                                                                                                                                                                                              ■ vi. Revising the entry ‘‘18 AAC
                                              safety risks subject to Executive Order                            reconsideration by the Administrator of
                                                                                                                                                                                              50.990’’; and
                                              13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);                               this final rule does not affect the finality
                                                 • is not a significant regulatory action                        of this action for the purposes of judicial                                  ■ vii. Adding at the end of the table the
                                              subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR                            review nor does it extend the time                                           heading ‘‘Fairbanks North Star Borough
                                              28355, May 22, 2001);                                              within which a petition for judicial                                         Code Chapter 21.28 PM2.5 Air Quality
                                                 • is not subject to requirements of                             review may be filed, and shall not                                           Control Program’’ and entries for
                                              Section 12(d) of the National                                      postpone the effectiveness of such rule                                      ‘‘21.28.010’’, ‘‘21.28.020’’, ‘‘21.28.030’’,
                                              Technology Transfer and Advancement                                or action. This action may not be                                            ‘‘21.28.050’’, and ‘‘21.28.060’’, in
                                              Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because                           challenged later in proceedings to                                           numerical order; and
                                              application of those requirements would                            enforce its requirements. (See section                                       ■ b. The table in paragraph (e) is
                                              be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;                            307(b)(2)).                                                                  amended by:
                                              and                                                                                                                                             ■ i. Adding at the end of the table the
                                                 • does not provide the EPA with the                             List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
                                                                                                                                                                                              heading ‘‘Regulations Approved but not
                                              discretionary authority to address, as                                                                                                          Incorporated by Reference’’ and entries
                                                                                                                   Environmental protection, Air
                                              appropriate, disproportionate human                                                                                                             for ‘‘18 AAC 50.076(g)(11)’’,
                                                                                                                 pollution control, Incorporation by
                                              health or environmental effects, using                                                                                                          ‘‘21.28.030.J’’, ‘‘21.28.040’’, and
                                                                                                                 reference, Intergovernmental relations,
                                              practicable and legally permissible                                                                                                             ‘‘21.28.070’’; and
                                                                                                                 Nitrogen dioxide, Particulate matter,
                                              methods, under Executive Order 12898
                                                                                                                 Reporting and recordkeeping                                                  ■ ii. Adding at the end of the table an
                                              (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
                                                 The SIP is not approved to apply on                             requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile                                        undesignated heading entitled
                                              any Indian reservation land or in any                              organic compounds.                                                           ‘‘Recently-Approved Plans’’ and entries
                                              other area where the EPA or an Indian                                 Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.                                         for ‘‘Volume II. Section III.D.5.’’ and
                                              tribe has demonstrated that a tribe has                                                                                                         ‘‘Volume III. Appendices Section
                                                                                                                   Dated: August 21, 2017.
                                              jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian                                                                                                          III.D.5.’’.
                                                                                                                 Michelle L. Pirzadeh,
                                              country, the rule does not have tribal                                                                                                             The additions and revisions read as
                                                                                                                 Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region
                                              implications and it will not impose                                10.                                                                          follows:
                                              substantial direct costs on tribal
                                                                                                                                                                                              § 52.70    Identification of plan.
                                              governments or preempt tribal law as                                 For the reasons set forth in the
                                              specified by Executive Order 13175 (65                             preamble, 40 CFR part 52 is amended as                                       *       *    *       *      *
                                              FR 67249, November 9, 2000).                                       follows:                                                                         (c) * * *
                                                                                                     EPA-APPROVED ALASKA REGULATIONS AND STATUTES
                                                 State citation                                Title/subject                                      State effective date                              EPA approval date              Explanations
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                                                                                                      Alaska Administrative Code, Title 18—Environmental Conservation
                                                                                                                Chapter 50—Air Quality Control (18 AAC 50)


                                                                    *                       *                       *                          *                                 *                         *                  *
                                              18 AAC 50.007 .....       Local Government Powers or Obligations Under a                  2/28/15 .........................................    9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                          Local Air Quality Control Program.                                                                                   citation].
                                              18 AAC 50.010 .....       Ambient Air Quality Standards ...............................   3/2/16 ...........................................   9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register except (7) and (8).
                                                                                                                                                                                               citation].



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                                              42472                  Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                                                                                  EPA-APPROVED ALASKA REGULATIONS AND STATUTES—Continued
                                                   State citation                                       Title/subject                                                State effective date                              EPA approval date                    Explanations


                                                                        *                       *                    *                                            *                                *                          *                  *
                                              18 AAC 50.025 .....           Visibility and Other Special Protection Areas .........                        11/26/16 .......................................     9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].

                                                                        *                       *                                 *                                *                                 *                        *                  *
                                              18 AAC 50.065 .....           Open Burning ..........................................................        3/2/16 ...........................................   9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].

                                                                        *                     *                    *                                              *                                *                          *                  *
                                              18 AAC 50.075 .....           Solid Fuel-fired Heating Device Visible Emission                               11/26/16 .......................................     9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                              Standards.                                                                                                                          citation].
                                              18 AAC 50.076 .....           Solid Fuel-fired Heating Device Fuel Require-                                  11/26/16 .......................................     9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register except (g)(11).
                                                                              ments; Registration of Commercial Wood Sell-                                                                                        citation].
                                                                              ers.
                                              18 AAC 50.077 .....           Standards for Wood-fired Heating Devices ............                          11/26/16 .......................................     9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].

                                                                        *                      *                    *                                             *                                 *                         *                  *
                                              18 AAC 50.245 .....           Air Quality Episodes and Advisories for Air Pollut-                            2/28/15 .........................................    9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                              ants Other Than PM–2.5.                                                                                                             citation].
                                              18 AAC 50.246 .....           Air Quality Episodes and Advisories for PM–2.5 ...                             2/28/15 .........................................    9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].

                                                                        *                           *                                 *                            *                                 *                        *                  *
                                              18 AAC 50.990 .....           Definitions ...............................................................    3/2/16 ...........................................   9/8/17, [Insert Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].

                                                                        *                               *                              *                              *                              *                        *                      *

                                                                                                                                     Fairbanks North Star Borough Code
                                                                                                                               Chapter 21.28—PM2.5 Air Quality Control Program

                                              21.28.010 .............       Definitions ...............................................................    3/2/15 (borough effective date) ...                  9/8/17, [Insert   Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].
                                              21.28.020 .............       Borough listed appliances .......................................              1/15/16 (borough effective date)                     9/8/17, [Insert   Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].
                                              21.28.030 .............       Prohibited acts ........................................................       10/1/16 (borough effective date)                     9/8/17, [Insert   Federal Register       except J.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].
                                              21.28.050 .............       Forecasting exceedances and restrictions in the                                6/26/15 (borough effective date)                     9/8/17, [Insert   Federal Register
                                                                              air quality control zone during an alert.                                                                                           citation].
                                              21.28.060 .............       No other adequate source of heat determination ...                             8/12/16 (borough effective date)                     9/8/17, [Insert   Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  citation].



                                              *        *        *           *         *                                            (e) * * *
                                                                        EPA-APPROVED ALASKA NONREGULATORY PROVISIONS AND QUASI-REGULATORY MEASURES
                                                                                                Applicable geographic or
                                                  Name of SIP provision                                                                                   State submittal date                     EPA approval date                          Comments
                                                                                                  nonattainment area


                                                                        *                               *                              *                              *                              *                        *                      *

                                                                                                                         Regulations Approved but not Incorporated by Reference

                                              18 AAC 50.076(g)(11) .....             Solid Fuel-fired Heating Device Fuel                          11/26/16 ...........................       9/8/17, [Insert Federal
                                                                                       Requirements; Registration of Com-                                                                       Register citation].
                                                                                       mercial Wood Sellers.
                                              21.28.030.J .....................      Prohibited Acts. Penalties ....................               10/1/16 (borough effective                 9/8/17, [Insert Federal             Fairbanks North Star Borough Code
                                                                                                                                                     date).                                     Register citation].                 Chapter 21.28 PM2.5 Air Quality
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Control Program.
                                              21.28.040 ........................     Enhanced voluntary removal, replace-                          1/15/16 (borough effective                 9/8/17, [Insert Federal             Fairbanks North Star Borough Code
                                                                                       ment and repair program.                                      date).                                     Register citation].                 Chapter 21.28 PM2.5 Air Quality
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Control Program.
                                              21.28.070 ........................     Voluntary burn cessation program .......                      4/24/15 (borough effective                 9/8/17, [Insert Federal             Fairbanks North Star Borough Code
                                                                                                                                                     date).                                     Register citation].                 Chapter 21.28 PM2.5 Air Quality
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Control Program.

                                                                                                                                                  Recently-Approved Plans
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                                              Volume II. Section III.D.5             Fairbanks North Star Borough .............                    11/23/16 ...........................       9/8/17, [Insert Federal             Fairbanks North Star Borough PM2.5
                                                                                                                                                                                                Register citation].                 Moderate Area Plan.
                                              Volume III. Appendices                 Fairbanks North Star Borough .............                    11/23/16 ...........................       9/8/17, [Insert Federal             Only with respect to the Fairbanks
                                                Section III.D.5.                                                                                                                                Register citation].                 North Star Borough PM2.5 Moderate
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Area Plan.




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                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 173 / Friday, September 8, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                        42473

                                              [FR Doc. 2017–18768 Filed 9–7–17; 8:45 am]              Reconsideration and Second Report and                 I. Introduction
                                              BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                  Order (MF–II Challenge Process Order),                   1. In the MF–II Challenge Process
                                                                                                      WC Docket No. 10–90, WT Docket No.                    Order, the Commission takes the next
                                                                                                      10–208, FCC 17–102, adopted on                        step to extend mobile opportunities to
                                              FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS                                  August 3, 2017 and released on August                 rural America by fulfilling its
                                              COMMISSION                                              4, 2017. The complete text of this                    commitment to design a robust
                                                                                                      document is available for public                      challenge process that will direct
                                              47 CFR Part 54                                          inspection and copying from 8:00 a.m.                 Mobility Fund Phase II (MF–II) support
                                              [WC Docket No. 10–90, WT Docket No. 10–                 to 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time (ET) Monday                 to primarily rural areas that lack
                                              208; FCC 17–102]                                        through Thursday or from 8:00 a.m. to                 unsubsidized 4G Long Term Evolution
                                                                                                      11:30 a.m. ET on Fridays in the FCC                   (LTE) service. The MF–II challenge
                                              Connect America Fund; Universal                         Reference Information Center, 445 12th                process the Commission establishes will
                                              Service Reform—Mobility Fund                            Street SW., Room CY–A257,                             be administratively efficient, fiscally
                                              AGENCY:  Federal Communications                         Washington, DC 20554. The complete                    responsible, and will enable it to resolve
                                              Commission.                                             text is also available on the                         eligible area disputes quickly and
                                                                                                      Commission’s Web site at http://                      expeditiously. This challenge process
                                              ACTION: Final rule; petition for
                                                                                                      transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_              will begin with a new, one-time
                                              reconsideration.
                                                                                                      Business/2017/db0804/FCC-17-                          collection of standardized, up-to-date
                                              SUMMARY:   In this Order on                             102A1.pdf. Alternative formats are                    4G LTE coverage data from mobile
                                              Reconsideration and Second Report and                   available to persons with disabilities by             wireless providers. Interested parties
                                              Order, the Commission adopts the                        sending an email to FCC504@fcc.gov or                 will then have an opportunity to contest
                                              parameters for the Mobility Fund Phase                  by calling the Consumer &                             an initial determination that an area is
                                              II challenge process, which will enable                 Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202)                  ineligible for MF–II support, and
                                              the Commission to resolve eligible-area                 418–0530 (voice), (202) 418–0432                      providers will then have an opportunity
                                              disputes expeditiously. The challenge                   (TTY).                                                to respond to challenges.
                                              process will begin with a new, one-time                                                                       II. Background
                                              collection of standardized, up-to-date                  Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
                                              4G LTE coverage data from mobile                                                                                 2. In February 2017, the Commission
                                                                                                        As required by the Regulatory                       adopted rules to move forward
                                              wireless providers. Interested parties                  Flexibility Act of 1980, the Commission
                                              will then have an opportunity to contest                                                                      expeditiously to an MF–II auction. The
                                                                                                      has prepared a Final Regulatory                       Commission established a budget of
                                              an initial determination that an area is
                                                                                                      Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) of the                    $4.53 billion over a term of ten years to
                                              ineligible for MF–II support, and
                                                                                                      possible significant economic impact on               provide ongoing support for the
                                              providers will then have an opportunity
                                                                                                      small entities of the policies and rules              provision of service in areas that lack
                                              to response to challenges.
                                                                                                      adopted in this document. The FRFA is                 adequate mobile voice and broadband
                                              DATES: The Commission adopted this
                                                                                                      set forth in an appendix to the MF–II                 coverage absent subsidies. The
                                              Order on Reconsideration and Second                     Challenge Process Order, and is                       Commission further decided that
                                              Report and Order on August 3, 2017,                     summarized below. The Commission’s                    geographic areas lacking unsubsidized,
                                              and the parameters set forth therein for                Consumer and Governmental Affairs                     qualified 4G LTE service would be
                                              the Mobility Fund Phase II challenge
                                                                                                      Bureau, Reference Information Center,                 deemed ‘‘eligible areas’’ for MF–II
                                              process, along with all associated
                                                                                                      will send a copy of this MF–II Challenge              support, and that it would use a
                                              requirements also set forth therein, go
                                                                                                      Process Order, including the FRFA, to                 competitive bidding process
                                              into effect October 10, 2017, except for
                                                                                                      the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the                 (specifically, a reverse auction) to
                                              the new or modified information
                                                                                                      Small Business Administration (SBA).                  distribute funding to providers to serve
                                              collection requirements in the challenge
                                                                                                                                                            those areas. For the purposes of MF–II,
                                              process that require approval by the                    Paperwork Reduction Act                               the Commission defined ‘‘qualified 4G
                                              Office of Management and Budget
                                                                                                        The MF–II Challenge Process Order                   LTE service’’ as mobile wireless service
                                              (OMB). The Commission will publish a
                                                                                                      contains new and modified information                 provided using 4G LTE technology with
                                              document in the Federal Register
                                                                                                      collection requirements subject to the                download speeds of at least 5 Mbps. The
                                              announcing approval of those
                                                                                                      Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995                       Commission also decided that, prior to
                                              information collection requirements and
                                                                                                      (PRA), Public Law 104–13. It will be                  an MF–II auction, it would compile a
                                              the date they will become operative.
                                                                                                      submitted to the Office of Management                 list of areas that were presumptively
                                              ADDRESSES: Federal Communications                                                                             eligible for MF–II support based on
                                              Commission, 445 12th Street SW.,                        and Budget (OMB) for review under
                                                                                                                                                            information derived from the Form 477
                                              Washington, DC 20554.                                   section 3507(d) of the PRA. OMB, the
                                                                                                                                                            data submissions and high-cost support
                                              FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                        general public, and other Federal
                                                                                                                                                            disbursement data available from the
                                              Wireless Telecommunications Bureau,                     agencies will be invited to comment on
                                                                                                                                                            Universal Service Administrative
                                              Auction and Spectrum Access Division,                   the new and modified information
                                                                                                                                                            Company (USAC), and it would provide
                                              Jonathan McCormack or Audra Hale-                       collection requirements contained in                  a limited timeframe for challenges to
                                              Maddox, at (202) 418–0660. For further                  this proceeding.                                      those initial determinations during the
                                              information concerning the Paperwork                    Congressional Review Act                              pre-auction process.
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                                              Reduction Act information collection                                                                             3. In order to make more informed
                                              requirements contained in this                            The Commission will send a copy of                  decisions on the challenge process, the
                                              document, contact Cathy Williams at                     this MF–II Challenge Process Order in a               Commission deferred deciding the
                                              (202) 418–2918 or via the Internet at                   report to Congress and the Government                 specific parameters of the challenge
                                              PRA@fcc.gov.                                            Accountability Office pursuant to the                 process and instead sought additional
                                              SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a                    Congressional Review Act (CRA), see 5                 comment. Among other things, the
                                              summary of the Order on                                 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A).                                  Commission sought comment in the


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Document Created: 2018-10-24 14:09:06
Document Modified: 2018-10-24 14:09:06
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis action is effective on October 10, 2017.
ContactClaudia Vaupel at 206-553-6121, or [email protected]
FR Citation82 FR 42457 
CFR AssociatedEnvironmental Protection; Air Pollution Control; Incorporation by Reference; Intergovernmental Relations; Nitrogen Dioxide; Particulate Matter; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Sulfur Oxides and Volatile Organic Compounds

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